“The food retail industry recognizes that there are real concerns about ergonomic or repetitive stress injuries, and we commend the Secretary for acting quickly to initiate proceedings to identify realistic, practical approaches to reducing these injuries,” Hammonds said. “Still, the medical and scientific communities have not reached any consensus on just what an ‘ergonomics injury’ is, and without a clear and understandable definition it is impossible to prescribe a cure.”
Hammonds emphasized that the food retail industry has made tremendous strides toward reducing workplace injuries.
“Our members work cooperatively every day with employees to solve problems, as it is in the best interests of management and employees to do so,” said Hammonds. “That is why our industry has cut injuries and illnesses by one-third over the past decade. Given the flexibility we have now, we will continue to reduce injuries.”
“No cookie-cutter federal regulation with command-and-control mandates is going to reduce injuries any faster than employers and employees working together in a cooperative spirit like we have already been doing,” Hammonds said. “We believe that OSHA would be much more effective by focusing its resources on voluntary consultations between the agency and industry, rather than on enforcement.”
Hosted by the U.S. Department of Labor, the Forum on Ergonomics held here today was the first of several such events that the department will hold in the next few months. The next hearings will be held July 20 in Chicago and July 24 in Palo Alto, CA.
Food Marketing Institute proudly advocates on behalf of the food retail industry. FMI’s U.S. members operate nearly 40,000 retail food stores and 25,000 pharmacies, representing a combined annual sales volume of almost $770 billion. Through programs in public affairs, food safety, research, education and industry relations, FMI offers resources and provides valuable benefits to more than 1,225 food retail and wholesale member companies in the United States and around the world. FMI membership covers the spectrum of diverse venues where food is sold, including single owner grocery stores, large multi-store supermarket chains and mixed retail stores. For more information, visit www.fmi.org and for information regarding the FMI foundation, visit www.fmifoundation.org.
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