Swedish Construction #Union @Byggnads youth in action on #IWMD17 PING @BWIglobal pic.twitter.com/CpNsA7EUkV
— Christer Wälivaara (@walivaara) April 28, 2017
Swedish Construction #Union @Byggnads youth in action on #IWMD17 PING @BWIglobal pic.twitter.com/CpNsA7EUkV
— Christer Wälivaara (@walivaara) April 28, 2017
In Honor of Workers’ Memorial Week, each day this week Citizen Vox discussed the need for safe jobs and called attention to the ways the Trump administration is dismantling key worker health and safety protections.
Significant challenges are ahead in the fight for safer workplaces.
Today is the first Workers’ Memorial Day under the Trump administration. And, now, more than ever, our communities should come together to demand strong protections in the workplace. Not one more worker should have to die from a preventable incident at work.
This week, our blog series recapped the ways in which the Trump administration and the Republican Congress are rewarding corporations at the expense of the health and safety of working families. In the first 100 days of this administration, workers suffered devastating rollbacks of workplace safety regulations and were left to wonder whether their political leaders would defund the agencies keeping them safe on the job.
Today, on Workers Memorial Day, people all over the world remember workers who were killed, injured or made sick by their jobs. It’s also a day we commit to fighting for safer working conditions. Most importantly, it is the day we remind ourselves that safe jobs are every worker’s right. more
The IUF Global Sugar and Palm Oil Program and the Kenya Union of Sugar Plantation Workers (KUSPW) observed the Workers’ Memorial Day, April 28th, with weeklong activities that included workshops on the impact of sexual harassment on the health and safety of sugar workers in Kenya. The program also included a march through the roads of the South Nyanza Sugar Company (SONY), located in the Nyanza Province with the message that good jobs are safe jobs while raising awareness among workers and their families that sexual harassment must also be considered as a hazard in the workplace. Another KUSPW branch at the Nzoia Sugar Estate (Western Province) also observed Workers’ Memorial Day for the third year in a row. more
In the last two weeks seven New Zealanders went to work and never came home. They were killed at work. This Workers Memorial Day, April 28th, NZCTU remembers them and other working people who were killed at work. more
Trade unionists from around the world demand a global ban on asbestos on #IWMD17 #AsbestosKills #Detox #CoP8 #IWMD17 https://t.co/Ksx9gRzqmz
— IndustriALL (@IndustriALL_GU) April 28, 2017
Dans plus de 100 pays, on célèbre aujourd’hui la journée mondiale de la sécurité et de la santé au #travail #IWMD17https://t.co/iRbB3rYV46 https://t.co/iA8o977qtY
— Syndicat CFTC (@SyndicatCFTC) April 28, 2017
Workers‘ Memorial Day – Gesundheit & Sicherheit von Leiharbeitsbeschäftigten nicht länger vernachlässigen! #IWMD17 https://t.co/02FRTABjHM pic.twitter.com/17PAoKq1nH
— DGB-Bundesvorstand (@dgb_news) April 28, 2017
EPSU’s Firefighters Network met in Brussels today on this International Workers’ Memorial Day. This is the day when we remember the 168,000 people who die each year from work-related accidents and diseases. And recognise that over 3 million people report accidents at work each year.
Many firefighters are developing cancers and unfortunately losing their lives due to their constant exposure to hazardous materials, as they go about their day-to-day work. more
Less than one in three women are given protective clothing specifically designed for women, according to a report published by the TUC today (Friday). more