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Asbestos: A Cautionary Tale from South Africa

1 December 2007 0 views No Comment

The British multinational Cape PLC mined asbestos in South Africa, and moved into South Africa after deciding that the costs for labor and compensation were too much in the UK. The result was 7,500 sick and dying workers. It took a five-year legal battle, but finally a meager settlement was reached. Each injured worker got only a few thousand dollars to compensate for the loss of their — and in some cases, the loss of their lives.

Clearly, globalization threatens the advances labor has made in employment protections. It just reiterates that one one laborer is injured, injury is done to all.”

Asbestos in the United States: Claims and the Trust Fund

The South Africa story brings into sharp focus the reality that asbestos is the new scourge of the modern workplace. have been working with laborers and workers to provide compensation for negligence. The enormity of this legal battle is staggering. More than 600,000 people have filed claims for compensation for asbestos-related injuries in the U.S. And has had to pay out more than $54 billion because of its negligence. Some predict that as many as 2.4 million additional asbestos claims will be filed, and will have to pay an additional $210 billion to compensate workers for asbestos injuries.

To this catastrophe, Congress has been working on creating an asbestos to pay claims from injured workers. Such a would ease the flood of in the court . But legislation has stalled on the issue of how much should be available in the fund. The highest figure mentioned has been $145 billion.

Asbestos is one of the major hazards workers have faced. The devastating effects of asbestos have been understood for quite some time. More than 30 years ago, the late physician and scientist Dr. and was once described as a hidden time bomb by Irving Selikoff.”

“The seeds of cancer,” he said, “are planted in the workplace … and by the time an agent is discovered and under control, millions of workers may have been exposed.” Dr. Selikoff also said that many organizations must partake in reducing the risks that laborers face with exposure to asbestos. Perhaps those in the legal profession should be added to the list. There is no doubt that because of the legal profession’s insistence that industry take responsibility for its actions, asbestos is no longer used in product manufacturing and in construction. Because of litigation, a safer workplace exists for employees who must deal with asbestos. are finding that they’re going to have to do the right thing by their workers — or they are going to pay a heavy price.

If you have been exposed to asbestos and have suffered injury, you may have a legal case and are advised to contact a lawyer specializing in asbestos-related cases.

Article Source: http://www.articlerich.com

 

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