TRADE
NEWS RELEASE
April 12, 2002
INJURY
AND ILLNESS RATE AT WORLD
TRADE CENTER SITE
NEARLY HALF NATIONAL AVERAGE FOR SIMILAR SITES
NEW
YORK - After nearly
three million work hours,
only 35 workers at the World
Trade Center recovery site
suffered injuries that resulted
in lost workdays, OSHA announced
today. Of the 35 reported
cases, none were life threatening.
"The
Lost Workday Injury and Illness
Rate (LWDII) rate at the World
Trade Center is 2.3," said
OSHA Administrator John Henshaw. "While
the work being done here is
clearly unparalleled, the closest
comparison is specialty construction
which includes demolition.
The lost time injury and illness
rate for specialty construction
is 4.3."
"Given
the extraordinary circumstances
involved, this rate reflects
the tremendous effort of everyone
involved -- the workers, Building
and Construction Trades Council
of Greater NY (BCTC), Building
Trades Employer's Association
(BTEA), the City of New York
and the federal government," said
Patricia K. Clark, OSHA's regional
administrator in New York.
The
LWDII was obtained by collecting
the injury and illness data
from all the contractors at
the site. The rate was then
calculated in the way injury
and illness rates are customarily
calculated -- by dividing the
number of OSHA-recordable injuries
by the number of hours worked.
This rate covers all contractor
employees working at the WTC
site.
OSHA
signed a partnership agreement
in November 2001 with contractors,
employees, employee representatives,
and governmental agencies participating
in the emergency response efforts
in lower Manhattan. In order
to continue this cooperative
effort to protect all workers
at the WTC site and to keep
the injury and illness rate
as low as possible, OSHA has
entered into a new partnership
with the construction manager
Bovis/Amec, BCTC, and BTEA.
The partnership was signed
on Wednesday.
For
more information on OSHA's
efforts at the World Trade
Center site, go to www.osha.gov
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