=================================================
NEWS FROM THE LIBERTARIAN PARTY OF CALIFORNIA
400 Capitol Mall, Suite 900
Sacramento, CA 95814
(916) 449-3941
=================================================
For immediate release: January 19, 2000
=================================================
For additional information:
Juan Ros, Executive Director
Phone: (818) 782-8400
Mailto:director@ca.lp.org
Web: http://www.ca.lp.org/
=================================================
Libertarians warn Cal-OSHA:
"Stay out of our homes"
SACRAMENTO -- The Libertarian Party of California
has joined a chorus of protesters against a new federal
policy that would make employers responsible for home
office workers -- a policy that has been widely criticized
but may still be implemented by the California
Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the party
announced today.
"Lock your doors and shut the blinds: this policy is
an outrageous invasion of privacy and a dangerous
extension of regulatory power," declared Libertarian state
chair Mark Hinkle. "Despite assurances that government
bureaucrats won't be inspecting private home offices,
Libertarians are skeptical that Cal-OSHA will keep its
word. This policy needs to be abolished immediately."
The federal Occupational Safety and Health
Administration posted an advisory notice on its web site
in November declaring employers responsible for
providing "safe and healthful working conditions" for
home-based employees -- despite never having received a
single safety complaint from home office workers or
telecommuters. After business groups attacked the
advisory, Secretary of Labor Alexis Herman withdrew the
advisory from OSHA's web site.
But in a commentary published in Saturday's Los
Angeles Times, Cal-OSHA Los Angeles area regional manager
Dan Shipley acknowledged that state policy is no
different: "The California Labor Code says that every
employer shall furnish a place of employment that is safe
and healthful. That means that the little home office
that an employee sets up with his employer's blessing is
an extension of office headquarters," Shipley said.
Libertarians disagree. "Cal-OSHA is ignoring the
criticism aimed at the federal OSHA and is asserting the
same claim of regulatory authority and employer
responsibility. Rather than recognize that more
regulations will kill jobs and reduce workplace
flexibility for employees, Cal-OSHA would rather embark
on a power grab and make life more difficult for
employer and employee alike," Hinkle noted.
Although OSHA pulled the online advisory to quell
the protest, the federal policy remains in effect --
giving Cal-OSHA more of a reason to move into action
and implement the new home-office rules.
"Libertarians have one thing to say to Cal-OSHA
regulators: stay out of our homes, literally and
figuratively," Hinkle concluded. "Employers and home
office employees should be free to make whatever
workplace arrangements they want without having to
worry every time the doorbell rings."
|