NAM, Allies to Congress: Reject Harmful Labor Law

The Warehouse Worker Protection Act would have adverse effects for the U.S. economy while failing to improve worker safety, the NAM and 44 allied business groups told Congress last week.
What’s going on: The legislation purports to safeguard America’s 2 million warehouse workers by ending speed quotas—but in practice, it would “impose long discarded and unworkable regulations on warehouse distribution centers, curtail employers’ due process rights when challenging citations from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and hamstring a critical part of our national supply chain,” the groups told the Senate and the House of Representatives.
What it would do: The measure, reintroduced in August, “would resurrect OSHA’s long-discarded ergonomics standard.”
- The standard was thrown out by Congress in 2001 just months after its introduction by OSHA, following outcry from businesses that said it constituted a costly and complicated compliance burden.
- “Congress was right then and should not revisit this issue now,” the organizations continued. “In addition, the bill would force employers to implement costly remedial measures even before OSHA has proven any violation.”
- The bill would also put in place a “system to micromanage the warehousing and distribution industry, which would undermine the efficiency of this vital part of American supply chains.”
What should be done: Congress should reject the Warehouse Worker Protection Act, the groups said.