Partner Post: California Sports Injury Claims
November 14, 2013Asbestos Infographic: Asbestos at Work
June 20, 2014by Brayton Purcell LLP | Apr 23, 2014 | Workers’ Compensation |
When fighting in court, many employers will argue that they were not aware of the dangers of asbestos at the time their workers were exposed to the substance. The National Toxicity Program declared asbestos a known human carcinogen in 1987, meaning that, today, no one can deny knowing that asbestos is a hazard to human health. Despite this fact, companies today are still exposing workers to asbestos in America. Most recently, real estate development and management company, Olivet Management LLC, has been accused by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) of knowingly exposing employees and contracted workers to the substance. Once exposure to asbestos has taken place, it can take years, or even decades, for asbestos-related diseases to show their symptoms. Resulting illnesses are often painful and deadly, cutting years off of a victim’s of life. Olivet Management LLC failed to do several things to protect their employees and other workers on the job: “train employees in the hazards of asbestos and lead and the need and nature of required safeguards; monitor workers’ exposure levels; provide appropriate respiratory protection; post notices, warning signs and labels to alert workers and contractors to the presence of asbestos and lead. The company also did not provide clean changing and decontamination areas for workers, many of whom wore their contaminated clothing home to households with small children.”