Minnesota Building & Construction Trades Council
Building Minnesota with Quality and Pride
This public ceremony honors building and construction trades members that have passed away during the past year due to work related injury or illness.
Please send the names of workers from your organization that you would like recognized at this event to Jenny Winkelaar at , 612-817-2930.
Deadline for name submission is Friday, April 12th
The Ceremony will be held on Monday, April 29th at 10:30 at the Workers Memorial Garden. We have reserved St. Paul Labor Center as a back up in case of inclement weather.
The Workers Memorial Garden is located on the southeast corner of the State Capitol mall, near the intersection of Cedar St. and 12th St.
This year we will come together to call for action on hazards that cause unnecessary injury, illness and death. We will stand united against the ongoing attacks on workers’ rights and protections and demand that elected officials put workers’ well-being above corporate interests.
The Occupational Safety and Health Act and Mine Safety and Health Act promise workers the right to a safe job. Unions and our allies have fought hard to make that promise a reality—winning protections that have made jobs safer, saved hundreds of thousands of lives and prevented millions of workplace injuries and illnesses.
But our work is not done. Each year, thousands of workers are killed and millions more suffer injury or illness because of their jobs.
After years of struggle, we won new rules to protect workers from deadly silica dust and beryllium, a stronger coal dust standard for miners and stronger anti-retaliation protections for workers who report job injuries.
These hard-won gains are threatened. The Trump administration has carried out an all-out assault on regulations, targeting job safety rules on beryllium, mine examinations, injury reporting and child labor protections. The labor movement and allies have fought back and blocked some of these attacks. However, this assault has taken a toll: Key protections have been repealed or rolled back and agency budgets and staff have been cut. There has been no action on critical safety and health problems like workplace violence, silica in mining and exposure to toxic chemicals.
Now, we have new opportunities to oppose these anti-worker attacks, hold the Trump administration accountable, and push forward to win stronger worker protections.
Please join us on Workers Memorial Day as we continue the fight for safe jobs.
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