A person wearing a tan jacket, blue shirt, and green safety vest holds a small American flag. The person is also wearing striped work gloves. In the background, part of a large American flag and a gray stone wall are visible.
April 28, 2023

Fighting for Safety on Workers’ Memorial Day – SWMW Law | Mesothelioma & Asbestos Lawyers

Workers’ Memorial Day was first marked on April 28, 1989, by the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO). On this same day, 19 years earlier, workers everywhere celebrated the passage of the Safety and Health Act and the formation of the Occupational Safety and Health Association (OSHA). The act aimed to ensure every worker’s fundamental right to job safety and was passed by tireless labor movement efforts.

Not only does this day of remembrance serve to honor the millions of workers who have died while at work, it’s also an opportunity to advocate for safer workplaces for all, especially those who have been injured, disabled, or made sick on the job.

According to AFL-CIO, since the passage of the Safety and Health Act, 647,000 workers’ lives have been saved. But the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that unsafe workplaces were still the cause of 2.6 million injuries and illnesses in 2021, over 5,000 workplace fatalities, and an alarming increase in repository illnesses across all industries. Worse is that so many of these illnesses and injuries are deemed preventable.

Among the top five causes of workplace deaths is exposure to harmful substances. One long-known harm comes from workplace exposure to asbestos. This naturally mined material was used in metalwork, manufacturing, and building components across many industries for most of the last century because asbestos fibers are flexible, heat-resistant, lightweight, and strong. These features meant that asbestos was added to countless materials, including:

  • Pipes
  • Gaskets
  • Valves
  • Welding rods
  • Joint compounds
  • Sheetrock
  • Plaster
  • Paint
  • Flooring
  • Tile
  • Insulation
  • Brakes
  • Clutches
  • Soundproofing
  • Transmission plates
  • Boilers
  • Compressors
  • Furnaces
  • Tanks
  • Turbines

When any of these products are installed, repaired, or removed, millions of undetectable asbestos fibers can be released into the air. The tiny, airborne asbestos fibers can then be inhaled or swallowed. Once lodged inside the lungs, soft tissues, or other organs, asbestos causes lasting and often fatal damage.

Tragically, the risks of asbestos-related injury and disease are often spread to a workers’ family when asbestos fibers travel home on a workers’ clothes, skin, hair, and belongings. Second-hand asbestos exposure can also happen to anyone working or passing through a site where asbestos was present.