T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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429.1 | Just back from a Six Sigma course | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Oct 09 1990 17:49 | 3 |
| It's very simple: The employer reduces the lead to safe levels.
Ann B.
|
429.2 | From experience | HLFS00::RHM_MALLO | dancing the night away | Wed Oct 10 1990 06:40 | 23 |
| I used to work in a Pharmaceutical Lab. where we prepared drug formulas
for all kinds of tests and on the same site we had plants manufacturing
active substances and various dosis forms.
Within this company rules were simple.
Levels of toxic substances are kept as low as technically possible.
Where required, safety measures are taken and personal protection is
obligatory and equipment is available.
As soon as pregnancy is confirmed, women report this to their manager
and actions are taken to prevend exposure to hazardous materials.
In some research labs where cats were used as test animals women would
not be employed because sometimes injuries caused by cats or contact
with cat faecies could harm the reproductive system.
Had this anything to do with preventing women to do certain jobs.
NO! It had everything to do with looking after their and their future
children's health.
Even if all possible safety measures are taken, accidents *can* and
*will* happen (and I've seen them happen).
I *do* favor equal oportunity, but there are situations where it's
just impossible.
And... if someone for the sake of equal rights wants to take the risk,
sign a paper relieving the emplyer from his liabilities.
Charles
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429.3 | No Easy Answers to This One | ICS::STRIFE | | Wed Oct 10 1990 09:26 | 19 |
| Reducing the lead exposure to "safe levels" does seem to be the obvious
answer. However, determining what level is actually safe is not
simple. Many materials which were felt to be "safe" 20 or even 10
years ago are not considered safe today. "TLVs" -- the level
at or above which exposure to a particular material is no longer considered
safe -- for many materials have been reduced in recent years. What
was "safe" a yesterday is not "safe" today and what is "safe" today may
not be "safe" tomorrow.
Do I think that the only answer is banning women of child bearing age
and capability from certain jobs? No, I just don't think that there
are easy answers to the dilemma. However, one solution might be for
the company to fully explain the risks; to offer to pay for the
newer very sophisticated pregnancy tests which detect pregnancy very
shortly after conception, and/or to offer alternative jobs at equal pay
to women who are preganant, trying or planning to get pregnant. This
may not be possible in smaller companies or in companies where there
are very few jobs that don't involve exposure.
|
429.4 | | ARRODS::COX | Hula Hoops 'R' Us | Wed Oct 10 1990 09:41 | 11 |
| A similar situation happened in the UK, at Sellafield, the nuclear re-processing
plant. Children with fathers working in 'risk' areas at the plant were 3000 times
(can't remember exactly) more likely to have leukemia.
The employer tried to get people who were past child-producing age, but in
an area of high unemployment several appeared on TV saying "what can we do ?."
I can't remember how this ended. There was a lot of manipulation of the media
and discrediation of the report by the employer.
Jane
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429.5 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Oct 10 1990 10:31 | 8 |
| I agree with .2 that if the employer is not allowed to ban women
from these jobs, that women should not be able to sue the employer
if they have a baby with birth defects. This is assuming that the
women are told about the risk and agree to taking it. There are
certain jobs that are nonhazardous to adults but are hazardous to
developing fetuses.
Linda
(who would like to see a cap on personal injury settlements).
|
429.6 | ss$_real_world | NEWOA::BAILEY | life below 4,000 revs | Wed Oct 10 1990 10:46 | 30 |
| <<< Note 429.5 by NAVIER::SAISI >>>
> I agree with .2 that if the employer is not allowed to ban women
> from these jobs, that women should not be able to sue the employer
> if they have a baby with birth defects. This is assuming that the
> women are told about the risk and agree to taking it. There are
> certain jobs that are nonhazardous to adults but are hazardous to
> developing fetuses.
> Linda
> (who would like to see a cap on personal injury settlements).
unfortunately this is the real world.. and here in the real
world any baby born with any defect that could under any
circumstances be blamed on "high levels of <anything>"
would lead to one (or many) court cases
(Baby learns slow? = sue, baby short/tall/fat/thin? = sue)
result for the company? lots of very expensive law cases
result for the company? company goes out of business
result for the workers? on welfare
the only people that would be happy are those that JUST HAVE to
make a point no MATTER *_WHAT_* the cost
Why not just push something till it breaks ?
|
429.7 | 2nd generation lawsuit? | MEIS::TILLSON | Sugar Magnolia | Wed Oct 10 1990 12:16 | 14 |
|
>I agree with .2 that if the employer is not allowed to ban women
>from these jobs, that women should not be able to sue the employer
>if they have a baby with birth defects. This is assuming that the
>women are told about the risk and agree to taking it. There are
I understand that the issue is not *just* with the possibility that the
women could sue the employer (a legal binding waiver could handle this)
but that the *children*, after reaching legal age, could sue the
mother's employer. (A fetus cannot sign a waiver...)
/R
|
429.8 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Wed Oct 10 1990 12:37 | 6 |
| If the process harms fetuses or whatever, I wonder if it also affects
sperm adversely, thus potentially leading to birth defects? Should the
men working with the materials be certified as sterile also?
-Jody
|
429.10 | Women are not dummer by default | HLFS00::RHM_MALLO | dancing the night away | Wed Oct 10 1990 13:15 | 12 |
| re .9
It's not the women's fault if they're not educated enough.
The women I worked with in the lab were professionals like myself and
trained in handling hazardous materials.
Besides that it's the employers task to educate if necessary.
And... the labs I used to work for made *no* allowances for people who
ignored safety rules. Usually after 1 warning suspension was the next
step.
B.t.w. would you like to guess how many *man* are not educated enough?
Charles
|
429.11 | why does this remind me of the 'no women in combat roles' discussions? | ASD::HOWER | Helen Hower | Wed Oct 10 1990 14:04 | 18 |
| Actually, there's two issues here:
- women possibly being overexposed to lead, and its possible consequence
on them and offspring.
**women not being promoted unless they work in the area/job that
includes such exposure.
Could the company rethink its promotional/seniority/rewards "culture" so that
this job is NOT a requirement for advancement? Or that there is some other
equally-regarded alternative that does not require exposure? This is far from
an easy solution, I realize, but offers a different approach to solving the
problem. Note that they suspect but haven't proven that it could affect men,
too....
Another problem with waivers, btw. Could the woman later claim that she signed
it under duress, as she wouldn't have been given the job (and the resulting
raises and promotions it can yield) if she refused to sign.... ?
Helen
|
429.13 | pointer | LYRIC::BOBBITT | COUS: Coincidences of Unusual Size | Wed Oct 10 1990 17:52 | 8 |
|
see also:
Womannotes-V2
735 - 2-legged incubators
-Jody
|
429.14 | | NAVIER::SAISI | Sister of Sappho | Thu Oct 11 1990 16:19 | 6 |
| The more I think about it, the more I like Ann's suggestion that
the employer should engineer the job so that workers aren't exposed.
If the environment is hazardous it is hazardous. This required a
mental swap on my part to realize that I was thinking about women
again as "the exception to the norm".
Linda
|
429.15 | Not so simple | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Thu Oct 11 1990 19:13 | 42 |
| This isn't really simple, is it? .2 and .5 seemed to think the issue
is protecting a potential fetus, and .6 is convinced that the issue
is "whose liable?"
Lots of issues here, and NONE of them simple. The case is going to set
some dangerous precidents. Consider
1. Is "protecting" a woman and her health really a good thing, if she
does not want to be protected? Is it legal?
2. Is the right of the fetus to be considered here? Would this mean
that right-to-lifers would win some sort of victory ? Is the right
of a fetus-yet-to-be more important than that of a woman?
3. Is the woman in charge of her own body? If she can then decide
on the risks, for both herself and a possible unborn fetus?
4. Does .6 have the right of it, and the whole issue is whether or not
one or more parties in the case will get sued in the future?
5. should the employer be made to make the environment safe for all?
Even if that puts him/them out of business? If so, are the rights
of the women involved preserved, if the jobs in question go away
anyway?
This is very complex - I find myself feeling that the women have the
right to protest, and that discrimination has occured. On the other
hand, the *moral* thing to do is to make the workplace safe for all.
On the other hand again, is it right to force an employer out of
business, if "reasonable" restrictions could solve the safety problem
for women?
I fear that justice will not be done in this case, and that - as base
note indicates - the legal question is whether or not this is a true
occupational requirement issue.
I'll be interested in seeing how it turns out.
-m
|
429.16 | more facts | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Sat Oct 13 1990 14:32 | 18 |
| A few more notes I found: The company (Johnson Controls)
previously asked women to agree not to become pregnant while
working in areas with lead. Eight women who agreed not to become
pregnant did become pregnant (I don't know out of how many).
It takes a while for blood levels of lead to drop, so having women
leave that area when they become pregnant may not be safe, as they
will have a high blood level of lead for part of the pregnancy. I
don't know what blood level is considered safe in pregnancy, but
the safe levels for children have been dropping as more is found
out about the harmful effects of lead.
It's not clear that the technology exists to keep the levels down.
One of the jobs was crane operator pouring lead from large
containers into molds. Reducing airborne lead in such an
environment could be very hard.
--David
|
429.17 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Mon Oct 15 1990 11:26 | 9 |
| David, I'm not sure I buy it that the technology doesn't exist.
After all, there are always things like self-contained environments,
robots, etc.. Perhaps conversions to a safe environment would cost
the company $$$ and that is the real reluctance. Also there have
been alot of new reports suggesting that exposure to hazardous
materials by men can also cause birth defects in their offspring.
There doesn't seem to be a big interest in pursuing this for some
reason. ;-|
Linda
|
429.18 | There are always alternatives. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Oct 15 1990 11:48 | 29 |
| <esc>[?451h
Pouring molten lead into molds?! That was the lead-handling
"technology" they used in Roman times! Nothing better has turned
up in over two thousand years? Someone isn't trying.
<Mount hobby horse.>
"It's too expensive to do it that way." is the whine that leads
to pollution, toxic dumping, unsafe work practices, et cetera.
I don't think it should be allowed ever again.
<Dismount.>
Okay. This company makes lead-acid batteries for cars. Do only
lead-acid batteries provide the need power? If "no", convert to
making another kind that works. If "yes", is this the only provider
of this product? If "no", study methods the other compan{y|ies}
use. If "yes", tighten the controls and stop worrying; the market
must pay the higher price.
What if other companies are producing lead-acid batteries only with
the high levels of lead? They too should have the more stringent
controls applied. What if these other companies are not in the
U.S.? Import of their batteries should be restricted on the same
grounds.
Rationale: The Taguchi method emphasizes that the social cost of
a product must be factored into the total cost of a product.
<esc>[?451l
Ann B.
|
429.20 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | who, me? | Mon Oct 15 1990 12:37 | 9 |
| I will diffidently point out that lead is not gender-specific in some
effects: first it makes you stupid, then it kills you. The research
mentioned in this string and elsewhere says that lead exposure may very
well have an effect on men's ability to reproduce, as well as on
women's.
First see reality. Then deny it if you can.
|
429.21 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Mon Oct 15 1990 12:49 | 9 |
| Why should we buy interpreters for politicians, when some politicians
can speak Russian, and the rest have the ability to learn? Why does
a company have to buy elevators when it could only hire employees who
can walk up stairs? I am not 100% in favor of this solution, just
pointing out that there is precedent. It all depends on who you
are willing to accomodate, and who you consider normal vs. an
exception. I think the worst possible way to decide this case is
to allow the fetal police to put another restriction on women.
Linda
|
429.22 | Women in the workplace | HOO78C::VISSERS | Dutch Comfort | Mon Oct 15 1990 12:53 | 23 |
| Dutch TV yesterday devoted a "Werken aan Werk" ("Work for Work" or
something like that) episode to a woman who worked for a big truck
company (guess which one - they made it impossible to identify the
company, all we know is that they make trucks, and have a short name
ending on an F - now that puts us at a loss, doesn't it, Charles? :-))
as a paintsprayer (?).
They had a chat with one of her co-workers who was positive about
"women at the workplace" and also commented it helped improve work-
environment conditions. Huh? Well, he explained, as soon as there are
women working, that triggers to think of ways to make the work lighter,
because women aren't usually physically as strong as men. He
illustrated his argument by naming the lift truck which was invented
during WW I when there were a lot of men involved in the war and a lot
of women, consequently, were needed in the factories. These women
couldn't lift heavy things as easily as the men who worked there, so
voil�, the lift truck was invented. He then said, if this situation
hadn't occured, there would never have been an immediate need for a
lift truck, so it'd still be unknown.
I wonder whether he's right - it sure is something to think about.
Ad
|
429.23 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:11 | 17 |
| Re .19: Just to point out - the argument wasn't that the conditions
were safe for men and unsafe for women, but that they were unsafe for
developing fetuses. [And of course we're trying to find some way around
the limitation. Isn't that what human beings do best? ;-)]
While I can understand the various concerns over costs and liability, I
still think it's rather a raw deal to prohibit all potentially fertile
women from a job just in case they might become pregnant. However,
since it appears that, in most cases, these jobs aren't intrinsically
desirable for their own sakes, but rather for the sake of the pay
and/or advancement opportunities they rate, I should think there is
room for compromise. [I'd also like to see the working conditions made
safer across the board; seems like a really raw deal to encourage
people to put their health at risk because it's the only way they can
earn that kind of money.]
-b
|
429.24 | no-one likes change | SNOC02::WRIGHT | PINK FROGS | Tue Oct 16 1990 01:25 | 10 |
|
It would pay to keep in mind that in many cases changes in the
workplace to introduce technology are resisted by the WORKERS. They
don't want to put their jobs at risk by "asking" for automation. I
think it's easy to sit in an office and say,"they should do this and
should do that". What you can never be sure of is what IS actually
happening.
There is most likely resistance to change on both sides.
Holly
|