C2 The BulleTin • Sunday, May 30, 2021 Oregon weighs new rules to protect workers Climate change makes wildfires, extreme heat more prevalent a certain threshold, employers should be required to provide N95s, provide ventilation. If they can’t bring down the par- ticulates in the air with a ven- tilation system, then workers shouldn’t be working. We’re talking about human lives.” BY JAMIE GOLDBERG The Oregonian As the Riverside fire raced through Clackamas County last September, Tammy Becke- meyer arrived for the night shift at the Fred Meyer distribution center in Clackamas. The facility was in a Level 2 evacuation zone and nearby residents were preparing to leave at a moment’s notice. Smoke cascaded into the build- ing through the dock doors as Beckemeyer worked, stinging her eyes and making it hard to breathe. Beckemeyer, the shop stew- ard who serves as a union rep- resentative, said Fred Meyer offered employees KN95 masks by request to help with the smoke but still required them to work long hours and meet their usual hourly quotas. (A Fred Meyer spokesperson said the company offered breaks in accordance with its union con- tract and local and federal labor laws.) “Conditions were horrific,” said Beckemeyer, 55. “They look at us as essential employ- ees, so they don’t give us extra breaks, you’re timed on all your assignments, and that time doesn’t stop.” Oregon, anticipating climate change will make wildfire haze and extreme heat more prev- alent in the years ahead, is de- veloping new rules to protect workers from their effects. But it is unlikely that any perma- nent mandate will be in place by this year’s fire season or its hottest months. Gov. Kate Brown directed the Oregon Occupational Safety and Health administration, or Oregon OSHA, and the Oregon Health Authority to develop a proposal for standards to pro- tect employees from excessive heat and wildfire smoke back in March 2020. It was part of a broader executive order man- dating that certain state agen- cies engage in efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and mitigate the impacts of climate change. Oregon OSHA and the Or- egon Health Authority were originally supposed to submit a proposal for the new workplace rules by next month, but the state extended that deadline un- til the end of September due to the pandemic. The agencies are now in the early phase of draft- ing those rules. Aaron Corvin, a spokesper- son for Oregon OSHA, said the agency might adopt a tem- porary rule ahead of wildfire season this summer to ensure requirements are in place to protect workers from smoke, but he said it is unlikely the state will adopt any temporary rule regarding extreme heat be- fore the summer. Oregon OSHA will host lis- tening sessions Thursday and next Tuesday to give workers the opportunity to share their Jeff Manning/The Oregonian The five-alarm Chehalem Mountain-Bald Peak fire spanned parts of Washington and Yamhill County. thoughts on the potential rules and their own experiences working in excessive heat and amid wildfire smoke. They’ll likely hear from workers and their advocates that the rules can’t come soon enough. “Workers should not be in a position of choosing between their health and a paycheck,” said Nora Apter, climate pro- gram director at the Oregon Environmental Council. “We’re at the table to ensure that doesn’t happen in the future.” ations, but others kept workers on the job, knowing any delay could risk their harvest. While some farmworkers were pro- vided N95 masks, others said their employers didn’t take ex- tra precautions to protect work- ers. Fernando Gutierrez, who oversees a farmworker outreach and advocacy program at the Oregon Employment Depart- ment, told The Oregonian/Or- egonLive last September that he spoke to several women who fell ill and vomited while work- ing at a farm in Canby during the wildfires. Those women had not been provided respira- tors by their employer. A warehouse worker, whom The Oregonian/OregonLive is not naming because he feared retaliation from his employer, said he could see smoke and ash in the air as he worked downwind from the Holiday Farm fire last September. He said it was several days of haz- ardous conditions before his employer offered N95 masks. Some workers developed coughs due to the air quality, he said. The worker ultimately opted to take several days off because of a health condition. On his third day at home, he said his employer started to pressure him to come back, prompting him to seek a doctor’s note be- cause he feared he might other- wise lose his job. “I would like to see some common-sense safety rules and stricter enforcement,” he said. “When the air quality reaches Wildfire smoke The air quality in many parts of Oregon reached hazardous levels last September as wild- fires raged throughout the state. Air quality levels in some places topped 500, the very highest measurement, signifying an immediate risk to public health. In California, when the Air Quality Index reaches an un- healthy level of 151, employers are required to either halt oper- ations or provide workers with particulate respirators, such as N95 masks. Oregon didn’t have a similar mandate last year. Instead, individual employ- ers decided on their own how to respond to the hazardous conditions. While some sent workers home, others told their employees to remain on the job. Complicating the situation was the fact that N95 respirators were in short supply due to the coronavirus pandemic, leaving many workers with few options to protect themselves. Some farmers paused oper- MEMORIAL DAY HONORING ALL WHO SERVED Please stay home, stay safe and save lives. CALL NOW! 541-317-3544 127 SE Wilson, Bend Extreme heat Last year’s wildfires were ex- traordinary in their scale and impact, but farmworkers and others who work outside rou- tinely face a much more com- mon hazard: a very hot day. Ira Cuello-Martinez, climate policy associate at PCUN, Ore- gon’s largest farmworker union, said he has heard stories from workers who have had to duck behind cars and trucks during their breaks simply to access shade during the hottest days of the summer. In other cases, he said workers have complained that they haven’t been provided breaks or water, even as tem- peratures topped 90 degrees. Cuello-Martinez said many farmworkers wear layers, even when it’s hot, to protect their skin from the sun. Many are also paid by how much they pick, incentivizing them to work quickly even in extreme heat. That can put them at sig- nificant risk for heat-related illness. Agricultural workers, fishers, forestry workers and hunters account for 20% of heat-related deaths nationwide, according to the Union of Concerned Scien- tists, a nonprofit science advo- cacy organization. And the frequency of very hot days is increasing in Or- egon. Since 1940, the average number of days exceeding 90 degrees has increased by over eight days per year in Portland and 21 days per year in Med- ford, according to The Oregon Climate Change Research Insti- tute’s biennial report. Portland set a record in 2018, when 31 days exceeded 90 degrees. “There are some simple solu- tions: providing canopies to provide shade, giving workers more breaks and space to cool down,” Cuello-Martinez said. “We understand harvesting crops is time sensitive, but at the same time, we can’t over- work and exploit workers to get the most productivity out of them. It’s dangerous.” Apter, of the Oregon Envi- ronmental Council, said the state at a minimum needs to ensure that employers provide access to drinkable water, shade or cooling stations, regular breaks and time to acclimate to heat. She said those work- ing during wildfires should be provided with respirators and the option to relocate to a safer location. She also wants the state to ap- ply its rules to all workers and require that employees and em- ployers are trained on the signs of heat strain and respiratory distress. She said those train- ings should be conducted in multiple languages. Oregon OSHA has published early drafts of possible wildfire and heat rules that focus on training employers and em- ployees, ensuring that work- ers have access to shade and drinkable water and making sure employees have access to respirators when air quality de- teriorates. Samantha Bayer, policy counsel for the Oregon Farm Bureau, which represents nearly 7,000 farmers and ranchers, said the farm bureau supports the state’s attempts to adopt rules to guide employers during wildfires and in extreme heat. However, Bayer said the farm bureau doesn’t want to see the state adopt overly prescriptive rules that would be difficult for employers to implement, such as mandating that respirators are fit tested or requiring that water provided to employees is a specific temperature. She said she would also be concerned if the state adopted requirements that employers shut down operations in certain conditions, or set too low of a bar for air quality thresholds before rules kick in. She said she would like to see the state provide assistance to help farm- ers secure N95 masks and any other equipment they would need to provide workers. “I think we definitely un- derstand the need to have pa- rameters for employees and employers to follow when air quality gets to a certain level that makes it hazardous to work outside or when temperatures rise to a level that could pose possible risks to employees,” Bayer said. “But they need to be achievable, which is something we struggled with when OSHA adopted COVID-19 rules.” Meaningful enforcement Kate Suisman, an attorney and the campaigns coordina- tor at the Northwest Workers’ Justice Project, said her orga- nization has been pushing the state to adopt rules to protect workers from extreme heat for years and is happy to see the rulemaking process moving forward. Suisman, though, said many workers are skeptical about whether the rules will make a meaningful difference. Oregon OSHA only inspects 2.5% of workplaces in a typi- cal year and can dismiss com- plaints without visiting a work- place, though the agency does prioritize visiting high-risk workplaces like farms. Oregon also has a history of handing out fines to employ- ers who violate rules that are significantly smaller than the national average, according to annual reports from the U.S. Department of Labor. Violations are often down- graded on appeal, too. A total of 1,629 Oregon OSHA violations were resolved through the ap- peals process over the last three years, with 43% amended on appeal and 12% rescinded, ac- cording to Oregon OSHA data. “These rules are only step one,” Suisman said. “They will hopefully empower workers to be able to tell their supervisors, ‘We have the right to these pro- tections.’ But then there also has to be meaningful enforcement.”