BlueGreen Alliance | Worker-Inspired Safer Chemicals Database Launched

Worker-Inspired Safer Chemicals Database Launched

Workers wanting safer workplaces now have a new tool to help them thanks to the release of the ChemHAT (Chemical Hazard and Alternatives Toolkit) database. The free online database was designed in consultation with rank and file union members.

September 4, 2012

Webinar to Be Held September 25 to Explain How the ChemHAT Database Gives Workers Information on the Dangers of Chemicals They Use Daily

WASHINGTON, D.C. (September 5, 2012) Workers wanting safer workplaces now have a new tool to help them thanks to the release of the ChemHAT (Chemical Hazard and Alternatives Toolkit) database. The free online database, launched this morning at www.chemhat.org and designed in consultation with rank and file union members who deal with hazardous chemicals every day, allows workers to quickly look up 10,000 commonly used chemicals and see their acute and chronic health effects. In the near future, the database will provide the ability for users to identify safer alternatives to the chemicals they are using.

“Workers around the country deserve to know what dangers are presented by the chemicals they work with every day, but that information was too difficult to come by in many cases,” said IUE-CWA President Jim Clark. “Working with the BlueGreen Alliance, we were able to help jumpstart this important resource that is easy-to-use and ensures no worker ever has to be caught unaware of the dangers their workplace poses to them and their community.”

“Since the federal government has not been able to pass legislation to adequately protect America’s workers from the harmful effects of hazardous chemicals, the ChemHAT database will allow workers and businesses to make their own informed decisions about the chemicals they use everyday and the risks they take,” said David Foster, the Executive Director of the BlueGreen Alliance.

ChemHAT was designed—under the guidance by the IUE-CWA, the industrial division of the Communications Workers of America, and BlueGreen Alliance—by more than 130 workers represented by IUE-CWA, the United Steelworkers, United Auto Workers and Communications Workers of America. The workers examined existing databases and discussed what was needed to make a tool that would be easy and accessible to the widest range of people.

“ChemHAT is the first chemical information source geared specifically for workers, who are of course, at the most risk of exposure. ChemHAT is exactly what we need to make sure we can easily get the knowledge we need to be safe on the job,” said Ernest Pacheco, District Energy/Environmental Program Coordinator for the Communications Workers of America, District 9 in California. “Perhaps even more importantly—especially in light of our inadequate current toxics regulations—is that it helps to reframe the issue to what it should have been for decades now to: ‘what should we be using instead of this dangerous chemical?’”

ChemHAT draws on the Healthy Building Network’s (HBN) Pharos Project, Chemical and Material Library (CML)), which includes a wide range of acute and chronic health effects ranging from skin rashes and eye irritants to birth defects, nervous system disorders and cancer. The database also identifies how workers most commonly come in contact with the materials, what available safety precautions they should take and what alternatives are available.

“Myself working in a chemical factory, it was an honor being a part of the process of this project. If one person is helped or kept safer, that will be great,” said Dale Barrett, a IUE-CWA member who has worked at DuBois Chemicals since 1978 and currently in the maintenance department for the company in Ohio.

“People like me are the first line of defense against dangerous chemical accidents in our workplace, community and environment,” said Debra Fisher, an IUE-CWA member from Dayton, Ohio who works at Dmax, a parts supplier for the auto industry. “Now, if I have a question about what risks or how to handle something, I have a resource that I helped create that I know will give me what I need, when I need it.”

Representatives of the IUE-CWA, BlueGreen Alliance and the ChemHAT Working Group will be holding a webinar on September 25 at 12:30 p.m. Eastern Time (11:30 a.m. Central Time; 10:30 a.m. Mountain Time; 9:30 a.m. Pacific Time). During the webinar, the hosts will walk participants through the database and explain its operation and creation. Individuals interested in signing up for the webinar should register at https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/3390594038053334528.