E
arlier this month,
Steve Skvara,
a disabled, retired steel worker who can't afford his wife's health care,
shook the AFL-CIO's Presidential Candidates Forum by asking tearfully,
"What's wrong with America?"
We should all be asking that question
today.
We've got
six coal miners
trapped beneath more than 1,500 feet of Utah
coal and rock, three brave men who struggled to rescue them are dead and six
more are injured.
And it's not because of an act of God.
It's because of the acts of man.
The disaster still unfolding at the
Crandall Canyon mine did not have to happen. It was preventable--as were the
deaths of 12 coal miners last year in the
Sago Mine
in West Virginia. As have been many, many
more deaths of workers in America's coal mines and factories, fishing
vessels, offices and construction sites.
Safety concerns
about the Crandall Canyon mine surfaced months ago, and safety experts
warned of particular dangers in the "retreat mining" technique used there
after it was approved by the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration.
In retreat mining, coalminers essentially pull out roof-supporting pillars
of coal as they work their way out of the mine. The retreat mining plan at
Crandall Canyon, says
United Mine Workers
of America President Cecil Roberts, "appears
to have been flawed, to say the least. In our opinion, that plan should
never have been approved."
No one should be surprised it was
approved, though. The Bush administration has been systematically
dismantling and cutting funding for workplace safety rules and oversight
since it came into office.
Every day in 2005 (the most recent data
available), 16 workers
died on the job
and 12,000 were made sick--and that doesn't
include the occupational diseases that kill 50,000 to 60,000 more workers
each year. In many if not most of these cases, one of two things occurred:
An employer disregarded the law, or the law wasn't strong enough to protect
workers.
Something is
deeply wrong with America today. Working men and women have lost their value
to the people who have been running this country for too long. Ruthless CEOs
wring working people dry and the neocon ideologues in the White House help
them.
Our wages are stagnant, our benefits are
disappearing, the middle class is shrinking and, for the first time, there's
a good chance our children will not be better off than our generation. We're
the most productive workers in the world but we have to work more hours,
more jobs and send more family members into the workforce just to keep up.
The heroes who rushed to Ground Zero to
save lives and who dug and sweated and struggled for months after Sept. 11,
2001, are suffering today from neglect and indifference. Neglect and
indifference left thousands stranded on rooftops and in a dark convention
center after Hurricane Katrina. Neglect and indifference meant deplorable
conditions for veterans recovering at Walter Reed. Neglect and indifference
kill far too many of us on the job.
There's a reason so many people who never
will step foot in a coal mine are riveted by the story of the trapped, dead
and injured miners. There's a reason Steve Skvara's comment at our
presidential forum moved so many people. There's a reason candidates
committed to improving the well-being of working men and women took back
Congress last year and will
take
back the White House next
year.
Working men and women--the great majority
in this country--want to fix what's wrong with America.