From: William H Breazeale <breazealew**At_Symbol_Here**GMAIL.COM>
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] LADA Agreement (and working safely as a condition of employment)
Date: August 9, 2012 3:28:05 PM EDT
Reply-To: DCHAS-L <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU>
Message-ID: <fac0.5692982c.3d55198b**At_Symbol_Here**aol.com>

I agree with Jim. Safety in the laboratory is not an academic freedom isue.

Jack

On Thu, Aug 9, 2012 at 9:47 AM, wrote:
I'm going to stand with Monona here and repeat that this has to be about
creating more effective (lab) safety programs. If we don't like the result,
what are we going to do differently.

Unless colleges and universities accept the principle that "working safely
is a condition of employment" they will never have the best possible (lab)
safety programs. ... Jim

James A. Kaufman, Ph.D.
Chair, ICASE Committee on Safety in Science Education
International Council for Associations of Science Education
www.icaseonline.net

President/CEO
The Laboratory Safety Institute (LSI)
A Nonprofit International Organization for
Safety in Science and Science Education

192 Worcester Road, Natick, MA 01760-2252
508-647-1900 Fax: 508-647-0062 Skype: labsafe
Cell: 508-574-6264 Res: 781-237-1335
jim**At_Symbol_Here**labsafetyinstitute.org www.labsafetyinstitute.org
P We thank you for printing this e-mail only if it is necessary

In a message dated 8/9/2012 12:00:16 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
LISTSERV**At_Symbol_Here**listserv.med.cornell.edu writes:

So I say yet again, we should only be discussing one thing: How to make
safety personnel and their programs more effective. For example, since lack
of training was an issue in the UCLA case, how are people planning to get
everyone trained and regularly updated? An untrained person is a school's
weak link. If nobody wants to enforce attendance, I'd be interested in what
alternate strategies people are using and how is that working out.

Look, if everyone just wants to share glowing words about the life and
mission of academic safety people and not even discuss making changes in
these hallowed programs, fine--I'll back off and wait for the next accident.
But I'm not blind. I can see that in most of the schools in which I work the
programs are not working. And it is especially dangerous in the art and
theater departments--appalling actually.

--
W. H. "Jack" Breazeale
715 High Battery Circle, Mount Pleasant, SC 29464
Professor Emeritus, Francis Marion University
Adjunct Professor, College of Charleston
Instructor, Laboratory Safety Institute
Home: 843-884-6939
Cell: 843-830-2714
Fax: 843-856-2856
Email: breazealew**At_Symbol_Here**gmail.com (New email address)

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