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Playlist: OSHA (Uncensored)
Description:
3 films created in the ending days of the Carter Administration, then
censored by the incoming young buck appointed by Ronald Reagan to
systematically neuter the organization.
From:PublicResourceOrg
Videos: 3
More playlists by PublicResourceOrg
The Story of OSHA (1980)
This
film tells workers how OSHA was set up to stem the tide of disease,
injury, and death, and what their rights are under the law. Explains
how NIOSH conducts tests, how standards are set, and how OSHA
investigates complaints. Produced and distributed by OSHA in 1980. Then
in 1981, the incoming head of OSHA Thorne Auchter recalled and
destroyed most copies. A few copies were kept alive by renegade union
officials who refused to return their copies. The penalty for being
discovered in possession of one of these films was loosing all OSHA
funding for their safety and health programs.
This film was
preserved through the years through the efforts of Mark Catlin, who
made this and other censored OSHA films available for digitizing.
Can't Take No More (1980)
A
quick paced history of occupational health and safety in the U.S. from
the Industrial Revolution to the 1970s. Produced and distributed by
OSHA in 1980. Then in 1981, the incoming head of OSHA Thorne Auchter
recalled and destroyed most copies. A few copies were kept alive by
renegade union officials who refused to return their copies. The
penalty for being discovered in possession of one of these films was
loosing all OSHA funding for their safety and health programs.
This
film was preserved through the years through the efforts of Mark
Catlin, who made this and other censored OSHA films available for
digitizing.
Worker to Worker (1980)
A
film showing the many kinds of safety and health problems that workers
encounter on the job. Workers talk about OSHA and NIOSH and their
experience in convincing others that they don't want to shut the plant
down — they just want a safe work environment. Produced and distributed
by OSHA in 1980. Then in 1981, the incoming head of OSHA Thorne Auchter
recalled and destroyed most copies. A few copies were kept alive by
renegade union officials who refused to return their copies. The
penalty for being discovered in possession of one of these films was
loosing all OSHA funding for their safety and health programs.
This
film was preserved through the years through the efforts of Mark
Catlin, who made this and other censored OSHA films available for
digitizing.