NCCBI
Continues Trying to Untangle Ergonomics MessNCCBI believes it's getting a bit
closer to untangling the regulatory confusion caused by
former state Labor Commissioner Harry Payne's
determination to impose ergonomics rules on about every
employer in North Carolina.
The association says it
will ask new state Labor Commissioner Cherie K. Berry to
make a declaratory ruling that Payne acted improperly on
Nov. 14 when he adopted as a state OSHA standard
ergonomics rules that were then under development by the
U.S. Department of Labor. Payne's action came more than a
month before the federal agency obtained permission from
President Clinton to begin implementing the rules.
A number of national and
state organizations, including NCCBI, have since asked
the courts to throw out the U.S. Department of Labor's
ergonomics rules. If those lawsuits prevail, as many
observers believe they might, then North Carolina would
be stuck with ergonomics rules that don't apply in any
other state. That's why NCCBI asked Commissioner Berry to
revoke the rules as a state standard.
Payne seized on the
federal ergonomics rules after his attempt to promulgate
his own state plan, which had been bitterly opposed by
NCCBI, was halted by the N.C. Rules Review Commission.
The commission agreed with NCCBI that Payne was violating
a directive from the General Assembly barring the Labor
Department from spending any tax money on ergonomics
regulation.
Determined to press ahead,
Payne then asked the courts to find that the Rules Review
Commission was unconstitutional. Shortly after taking
office, Commissioner Berry asked state Attorney General
Roy Cooper to dismiss that lawsuit. I thought it
was absurd for one state agency to be suing another state
agency at a cost of $200,000 to the taxpayer,
Commissioner Berry says. Under the old lawsuit, the
Labor Department basically was suing to create what would
now be a second layer of rules. We're not spending
$200,000 of the taxpayers' money to do that.
Ergonomics is an emerging
but still largely untested science that contends that
many repetitive motion injuries such as carpal tunnel
syndrome can be prevented by making adjustments to how
jobs are performed. Supporters of ergonomics regulations
were disappointed that the National Academy of Sciences'
long-awaited report on ergonomics, which was released in
late January, did not conclusively support their view.
The study concludes that
while some jobs can be associated with injuries to the
back, wrist and other areas, the work-injury relationship
is complicated by many factors, including some that are
beyond an employer's control. Business interests says the
study's less-than-crystal-clear conclusions prove that
the U.S. Labor Department's ergonomics regulation is
scientifically shaky and should be
overturned.
The NAS study proves
that OSHA's ergonomics regulation is nothing more than a
house of cards built on a rickety foundation of
questionable science and statistics, says Jenny
Krese, director of employment policy at the National
Association of Manufacturers. If there ever was any
doubt that the rule should be overturned by Congress or
the courts, this study removes it by underscoring both
the lack of clarity about the exact causes of
musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) and the fact that the
rule was issued before the Congressionally-ordered study
was complete.
Strengthening the argument
by the business community that the National Academy of
Sciences' study is incomplete at best was a stinging
dissent written by one of the scientists who composed the
panel. Dr. Robert B. Szabo, chief of the Department of
Orthopedics at the University of California at Davis,
particularly disagrees with the study's conclusion that
carpel tunnel syndrome can be caused by performing
certain jobs, particularly typing on a computer keyboard.
Szabo cited several
studies which the panel ignored that undermine its
conclusions. The only valid conclusion that can be
reached, he says, is it is not universally accepted
that job-related factors are important determinants for
predicting the appearance of carpal tunnel syndrome. In
the general population, its prevalence is the same
whether people perform repetitive activities or
not.
Business groups say the
lack of clarify in the 450-page study supports their
contention that President Bush and Congress should
intervene to halt enforcement of the ergonomics
regulations, which now are scheduled to go into effect in
October.
Promoting
Diversity with Women's Speakers Bureau
A top priority for NCCBI Chairman
Mac Everett has been to involve more women in NCCBI. As
part of that project, a list of women who are willing to
serve on various state boards and commissions has been
sent to Gov. Mike Easley. There is also an NCCBI Women's
Speakers Bureau that includes more than 70 names of
female professionals who are willing to speak in their
areas of expertise.
This will be a valuable
tool as NCCBI staff develops agendas for upcoming
meetings. This list will also be shared with NCCBI
members who would like to use it as a resource for
potential speakers for meetings. If you would like a copy
of the Women's Speakers Bureau, please contact Julie
Campbell, NCCBI director of governmental affairs, at
919-836-1402.
Membership
Recruitment: Good crowds turned out in Winston-Salem and
Charlotte at two recent membership recruitment receptions
staged by NCCBI. R.J. Reynolds, Sara Lee and Wachovia
sponsored the Jan. 25 reception held at the N.C. School
of the Arts. Several Charlotte business leaders,
including outgoing NCCBI Chairman Mac Everett, sponsored
the Feb. 15 reception at the Duke Mansion.
Film School Dean Dale
Pollock welcomed NCCBI members and prospective members at
the Winston-Salem reception and thanked the association
for its leadership in passage of the $3.1 billion higher
education bonds. Pollock said the bonds will allow the
School of the Arts to expand and make much-needed
repairs. NCCBI board member John Davis and J.D. Wilson, a
member of NCCBI's Small Business Advisory Board, then
spoke briefly about the value of their membership in the
association.
Other sponsors of the
Charlotte reception were Erskine Bowles of Carousel
Capital, Bill Coley of Duke Power, Don Hathcock and
Krista Tillman of BellSouth, David Lewis of Bank of
America, Will Spence of Wachovia and NCCBI Second Vice
Chairman Jim Hyler of Raleigh.
Kirk
Goes to Washington: In his role as chairman of the State Board
of Education, NCCBI President Phil Kirk traveled to
Washington last month go discuss education issues with
members of the North Carolina congressional delegation.
Accompanying Kirk was State Superintendent of Public
Instruction Mike Ward.
Membership
News: New
members from Dec. 1, 2000 to Jan. 31, 2001, include:
Jim Bearden, Greenville; Bristol-Myers Squibb, Atlanta,
Ga.; Design Nation, Cary; DFI Group Inc., Raleigh;
Rufus L. Edmisten Law Offices, Raleigh; ENSR
International, Raleigh; Fairfax Village, Lincolnton;
Frank Freeman, Greensboro; Freeman Commercial Real
Estate, Winston-Salem; Granville County Schools, Oxford;
City of Hickory, Hickory; High Point Regional
Health System, High Point; Lexington Memorial
Hospital Inc., Lexington; Town of Mocksville, Mocksville;
Mountain Air Country Club, Burnsville; N.C.
Agribusiness Council Inc., Raleigh; N.C. Black
Chamber of Commerce, Wilmington; New Hanover
County Public Library, Wilmington; North
Carolina's Brunswick Islands, Shallotte; Old North
State Medical Society, Raleigh; OmniArchitecture,
P.A., Charlotte; Pine Level Bank, Pine Level;
Regency Housing Group, Raleigh; Blanche &
Julian Robertson Family Foundation, Salisbury;
Standard Motor Products, Wilson; Sumco's
International, Philadelphia, Pa.; Volvo Commercial
Finance LLC, Greensboro.
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