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Safety chief sidesteps talk of Strip deaths

Official said to monitor LV situation

The head of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration spoke Tuesday at a conference of safety engineers but avoided any discussion about a string of construction site fatalities that sparked a one-day walkout at two Strip projects.

Edwin Foulke Jr., assistant secretary of labor for OSHA, had been scheduled to participate in three panel discussions Tuesday at the 47th Annual American Society of Safety Engineers conference.


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However, Department of Labor spokeswoman Deanna Amaden said Foulke would address neither the deaths at CityCenter and the Cosmopolitan nor the subsequent strike over worker safety issues during his two-day trip to Las Vegas.

Foulke's appearances Tuesday, which were scheduled months ago, also follows Monday's arrival of compliance safety officials from the federal agency who will work with Nevada OSHA officials on a comprehensive inspection of the $9.2 billion CityCenter job site.

Amaden said any comments from Foulke about safety issues at the two Strip sites would not be appropriate now because Nevada OSHA is taking the lead on the investigation with help from the federal agency.

However, she said Foulke is paying attention to the situation in Las Vegas, and to recent construction deaths in Miami and New York City.

Nevada Building and Construction Trades Council spokesman Steve Redlinger said the council, which is an alliance of 17 affiliated construction unions, is "baffled" that a "public servant is unwilling to address public concerns."

Redlinger said union officials have heard that Foulke will be meeting with several contractors today. However, none of the unions involved in the two Strip construction projects have any meetings scheduled with Foulke.

"We feel the fact he doesn't seem willing to meet with us to discuss obvious concerns is a slap in the face," Redlinger said.

"We also have a role in safety," Redlinger said of the unions.

Although Foulke did not discuss the recent deaths at the local job sites, he did say in remarks during the panel discussions that all companies need to look for areas where they're having problems with worker safety to prevent illnesses, injuries and fatalities.

"It has to be a bottom-line issue more than anything else," Foulke during one session called "OSHA: Business of Safety."

Foulke's arrival comes one week after union workers walked off the job for 24 hours at MGM Mirage's CityCenter project and the $3.9 billion Cosmopolitan because of work safety issues. The workers returned to work after Perini Building Co., the general contractor on both projects, agreed to fund a safety review of the work sites, provide safety training for all workers and to allow union and safety officials on site at all times.

Eight workers have died on the two job sites in the past 16 months, most recently on May 24 at CityCenter.

Contact reporter Arnold M. Knightly at aknightly@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893.

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w keller wrote on June 12, 2008 09:55 AM: what else is new.


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Popcorn1 wrote on June 12, 2008 07:47 AM: Where is the union safety training program, the employers safety training program, and the employees accepting responsibilty for working safely? Sound like everyone involved wants to blame someone else.


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James Martin wrote on June 11, 2008 04:27 PM: Anyone who has worked in industry with safety/health issues for any duration of time can tell you how useless OSHA has been. I have worked in the specialty chemical business for 30 years and have seen tragedy multiple times. OSHA's top priority has never been employee safety. More times than not, OSHA shows up when it's too late. There is no workplace monitoring, no regular inspections for safety controls, no system set up for catching unsafe work practices, etc.. OSHA has no presence in the workplace until someone gets killed. They are paid fat salaries by the U.S. taxpayers, who get little in return. There is obviously no checks and balances in overseeing that OSHA is meeting the workplace needs of the people who keep this country rolling. When have you EVER heard of OSHA getting involved in the safety of a particular workplace without either a death occurring, or employees demanding that OSHA get involved? The latter is often times the deflating wakeup call to the everyday workers when they see how ineffective this branch of the government truly is.


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hilobamacaine wrote on June 11, 2008 01:35 PM: what "baffles" me is that this guy thinks any career beauracrat is a "public servant"


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The Man wrote on June 11, 2008 07:21 AM: Letting Nevada OSHA take the lead?? Where where they when the first accident happened? The problem is that half the project is owned by a terrorist nation with a bag full of money that MGM/Las Vegas needs and they will buy who they need to make sure the Terrorist nation is pleased.


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LittleBird wrote on June 11, 2008 06:13 AM: What did you expect?A government employee didn't come here to sort out the safety issues that are happening on the local level,he is here to address a bunch of safety engineers,probably as a key note speaker to a scheduled convention.Expecting the Feds to step up to the plate is like asking parents to be responsible for their children.The Union is just saber rattling for their members.The best way to solve the safety issue is for the contractor to terminate any employee committing safety infractions,like not tying off,immediately.But then the contractors have the Unions to fight and can't enforce their safety program without the threat of a walkout.Sad to think that there will be more deaths at City Center before the project is finished.Nobody is interested in the release the number of deaths factored into this project according to man hours worked.It is not a particularly accurate number,just a number used as a gauge for insurance purposes.The number would really astound most of the general puplic.Just a guess would be 20 to 25 deaths.Pretty sad,isn't it?


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Bush Appointee wrote on June 11, 2008 05:02 AM: "Nevada Building and Construction Trades Council spokesman Steve Redlinger said the council, which is an alliance of 17 affiliated construction unions, is 'baffled' that a 'public servant is unwilling to address public concerns.'"

"'We feel the fact he doesn't seem willing to meet with us to discuss obvious concerns is a slap in the face,' Redlinger said."

What do you expect? He's a Bush appointee.