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A new study confirms that commonsense workplace protections from extreme heat — water, shade, breaks — help save workers from being injured on the job. The finding — something labor and climate advocates have long known and pushed for in public policy — comes just as the federal government shutdown may have suspended the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s lengthy rulemaking process to create the U.S.’s first-ever nationwide heat standard for workers.
Some experts now fear that the agency, which ordinarily takes about seven years on average to establish new rules, will face further delays.
In order to calculate the risk of injury on hot days, researchers from the public health schools a