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Editorials/Opinon Pieces by WEC

January 13, 2012 - The Star Ledger
Stronger Safeguards Needed in N.J. Hospitals, Nursing Homes by Ann Twomey, President, Health Professionals and Allied Employees (HPAE) and Chrystal Disant, Health and Safety Chair, HPAE Local 5004 and a member of the WEC Board of Directors

Should corporate lobbyists decide whether safe equipment and procedures are needed if you or a loved one have to go to a hospital or nursing home? Or should health care professionals make those decisions?

That's the type of issue being debated in our Statehouse and in Congress over safeguards that protect the public's health and safety.

November 15, 2011 - The Star Ledger
Gov. Chris Christie Halted Projects to Improve School Safety
by Eileen Senn, WEC Industrial Hygiene Consultant

All schoolchildren should be provided with a learning environment in which the roof and pipes don't leak, the electrical system poses no hazards and the classroom air isn't tainted with asbestos, lead, mold or other toxic contaminants. Yet New Jersey today gets an "F" for failing to meet that responsibility.

October 23, 2011 - The Record of Bergen County
Why We are Better Off with Right-to-Know Laws by Rick Engler, WEC Director

Why are we safer now? Because more than 25 years ago, a coalition of New Jersey labor, environmental and community organizations took the lead to persuade our state legislature and Congress to pass landmark laws giving workers and community residents the "Right to Know" about toxic chemicals used in industrial and many other facilities.

September 21, 2011 - The Star Ledger
Corporate Efforts to Remove Workplace Safeguards Threaten Health, Safety, Quality of Life by John Shinn, Director, District 4, United Steelworkers and a member of the WEC Board of Directors

Do you trust Wall Street and corporate CEOs to protect our jobs, living standards and clean air and water - or do you think public oversight is needed?

August 16, 2011 - The Record of Bergen County
'Job Killing Regulations' Do Nothing of the Sort by John Pajak, Vice President, Teamsters Local 877 & WEC President

It's time to kill the phrase "job-killing regulations." It's a clever slogan invented by corporate lobbyists. But it happens to be a lie.

June 19, 2011 - Star Ledger
A Conversation with Rick Engler on the Environment
Christie talks a good game, but hasn't delivered much yet.


NEWS ARTICLES FEATURING WEC

December 9, 2011
Who's the Boss? Tug of War in Legislature betweeen Executive and Legislative Powers
by Jim Hooker
Democratic lawmakers took another shot at the Republican Christie administration Thursday over the extent and limit of the powers exercised by the two branches.

April 12, 2011 - Newsworks
Environmentalists argue against 'waiver rule' in N.J. by Phil Gregory
Advocacy groups in New Jersey are urging the Christie administration to drop a proposed rule they say would be one of the most dramatic rollbacks of environmental regulations in 30 years.

April 12, 2011 - NJ.com
Environmentalists urge N.J. to drop proposed 'waiver' allowing businesses to bypass regulations
by Salvador Rizzo
Environmental advocates today painted a bleak picture of what would happen to New Jersey's natural resources if the state moves ahead with a plan that would allow businesses, towns and people to bypass environmental regulations.

March 21, 2011 - Philadelphia Inquirer
Environmental Regulatory Shift in N.J. Draws Praise and Concern by Maya Rao
Home to a densely packed population and heavy industry, New Jersey has been a longtime leader in adopting strong regulatory standards to protect residents against pollution of their soil, air, and water.

That's why environmental advocates sounded alarms when they learned that a bill scheduled for a vote in the Assembly last week would ban state agencies from adopting rules stricter than federal ones without coming to the Legislature for approval.

January 10, 2011 - The New York Times
EPA Wades in to Battle Over Hospital Disinfectant by Elana Schor of Greenwire
U.S. EPA is interceding in a New Jersey public-health flap that could have national implications, ordering a hospital services company to stop disinfecting its ambulances with finely misted pesticides after a local union complained of workers falling ill.

January 7, 2011 - Times of Trenton
EPA Orders Ambulance Company to Stop Using Fogger by Matt Fair
Acknowledging that workers have become ill after exposure to disinfectant chemicals, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) this week ordered a New Jersey ambulance company to cease using fogging machines to sanitize its
vehicles.

December 26, 2010 - Times of Trenton
EMS Workers In a Fog Over Disinfectant's Feared Danger by Matt Fair
In the months after the Monmouth-Ocean Hospital Service Corporation (MONOC) began using newly acquired machines to disinfect its ambulances in May 2009 by pumping the vehicles full of pesticide fog, paramedics began experiencing troubling ailments, PEMSA officials say.

December 22, 2010 - WBAI Radio in New York City
Union Fights Toxic Misting of Ambulances
Eileen Senn, WEC Industrial Hygiene Consultant was interviewed by Jose Santiago, News Director at WBAI in New York City. The interview is available online here in the WBAI archive file. Go
to WBAI Evening News, December 22, 2010, 6 PM and fast forward to the 15:30 mark. You can also download the mp3 file here.

June 9, 2010 - The Star Ledger
N.J. Coalition Petitions Lawmakers to Kill Bill Against Tougher Safety, Conservation, Health Rules by Brian T. Murray
A coalition of 76 labor, health and environmental groups signed a petition in Trenton today, demanding the Legislation to kill a bill that would prevent New Jersey state agencies from adopting safety, conservation and health standards that are tougher than federal regulations.

June 9, 2010 - NJ Spotlight
John Pajak: President of NJ Work Environment Council by Tom Johnson
With 20 years in the oil industry, John Pajak knows safety is essential.

December 3, 2008 - Jersey Journal
Kearny Chemical Firm Fined for Safety Violations
Kuehne Chemical in Kearny has been cited and fined by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for 33 worker safety and health violations, including lapses that could lead to a toxic chlorine release, an advocate group and OSHA officials confirmed yesterday.

October 8, 2008 - Gloucester County Times
Three Local Industries Praised in Risk Report by Siobhan A. Counnihan
A report released Tuesday by an alliance of labor, environmental and community organizations recognized three Gloucester County industries for reducing the potential risk to populations in harm's way from a catastrophic chemical release.