OPINION Saturday, June 1, 1985 The Michigan Daily Page 5 01 e Micthigan Ruttv Vol. XCV, No. 10-S 95 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by Students at The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board Increase awareness MICHIGAN IS one of 24 states which is not responsible to the federal Occupational Safety and Health Ad- ministration (OSHA), which means the state has to come up with its own set of equally effective regulations to those set down by the federal government. The federal OSHA's Hazard Communication Act, or "Right to Know" law, will take effect in October, as Michigan legislators are busy working on a similar but more inclusive bill. This week, the House Labor Committee passed a bill which makes employers responsible for providing their employees with basic training about toxic and other hazardous substances which workers might be exposed to at the worksite. The bill also stipulates that all containers be labeled. Because of this provision, employees have the right to refuse to handle unmarked or misidentified con- tainers. Still, the bill allows for the protection of trade secrets. Companies may withhold precise identification as long as the chemical's basic toxicology is included so that health professionals can find or resolve related problems. Last year, the Senate adopted a bill which embraced the federal standard while the House drew up legislation similar to this year's bill. The major difference in the House version is that it applies to all employees, and is not limited to those in the manufacturing segment of industry. As it is, inspection of occupational health problems is difficult because there is a shortage of funds in this area. r Inspectors follow up on complaints and often arrive at a workplace only after a fatality or catastrophe occurs. With the approval of the "Right to Know" law, em- ployees have the power to make educated decisions, and assert their right' to a safe working environment. In- creased awareness at the worksite helps to prevent ac- cidents without necessitating continual inspections. Hopefully, the Senate will pass this progressive legislation and extend the "Right to Know" to all em- ployees who work with toxic and other hazardous materials. Letters to the Daily should be typed, triple-spaced, and signed by the in- dividual authors. Names will be withheld only in unusual circumstances. Letters may be edited for clarity, grammar, and spelling. Wasserman Letters Ideals in CentralA merica To the Daily: I would like to make a few commen- ts about Dean Baker's article "Lies in Central America" that appeared on your May 21 Opinion Page. I agree with Baker to the extent of feeling that the Reagan Administration has no immediate interest in helping to establish democracy in all Latin American countries of either the authoritarian or totalitarian ilk. I believe that our government would like ideally to have a completely democratic Latin America as a neighbor. But if faced with the choice of allowing either some form of democracy to develop in a Latin American country of guaranteeing that there would be no Russian or Cuban influence in the area, any U.S. government administration, I think, would quash the fledgling democracy in order to keep the region in question free of powerful American foes. I ad- mit that such political and military power plays are morally repugnant, but they are also often politically ex- pedient. But I still cannot grant, though, that the so-called indigenous democratic agents in such countries as Nicaragua are any less guilty of practicing real politik than the freedom lovers of the North and East. Baker lauds the political processes that generated the so-called democratically-elected government of Nicaragua. I am afraid, however, that in expressing his praise of the Minaguan regime, Baker, perhaps unwittingly, also betrays the inconsistency of the real politiker. For, truly, if Baker were to measure Nicaragua's government by ideal standards, he would discover a majoritarian dictatorship, not a democracy, in his darling. Undoub- tedly, there were certain forces at work during the last Nicaraguan elec- tion that made it seem, to liberal Americans at least, that the small country in question had become a republic. But actually, given the rigid and thorough control of the economy by the Nicaraguan state, and the resistance of certain minority groups (the Meskito Indians in particular) to forced socialization, Nicaragua emerges as democratic in name, but fascist in fact. But, again, I am measuring the Nicaraguan gover- nment against ideal standards which, as we all know, are hardly ever replicated in real life. -Bruce Poindexter May 22 BLOOM COUNTY /Y -- -l - by Berke Breathed 6KlC f V. itt 6ir wf YOU.19XW.MEAfN 'u&r M:, &Mr IN 7?NETUBMP TODAY, I /rM We.6/IF MPlY PONDER 1MTh ar 5we ?6 lkJ OflITAU. THEN/Ira C f/CC U WH/EN 15hSA'F6 AINI. , Y. :ii"ii