OSHA renews strategic partnership to reduce injuries, lost work time at Ford Motor Co. auto plants
Partnership includes UAW, ACH and MIOSHA in partnership with OSHA, Department of Labor
OSHA administrator Dr. David Michaels has signed an agreement renewing OSHA’s partnership with Ford Motor Co., the United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America and Automotive Component Holdings LLC, and welcoming the Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration as a new partner.
“OSHA’s partnership with Ford and the UAW has helped significantly reduce the frequency and severity of worker injuries,” said Michaels. “The partnership is a win-win for management and labor. It contributes to Ford’s competitiveness in the global economy while protecting the safety and health of thousands of workers.”
The goal of this strategic partnership is to prevent occupational fatalities, injuries and illnesses at participating Ford Motor Co. and Automotive Component Holdings locations in Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Missouri and New York.
Since 2000, OSHA has had a partnership with Ford and the UAW. ACH joined the partnership more recently. The partnership has resulted in a 74 percent reduction in total case incident rates and an 88 percent decrease in days away from work, restricted duty and job transfers, better known as “DART,” rates. In 2010, 75 percent of worksites participating in this partnership had DART rates below Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics industry averages.
Plants covered by this agreement under federal OSHA include: Chicago Assembly Plant and Chicago Stamping Plant, Chicago, Ill.; Kansas City Stamping Plant, Kansas City, Mo.; Buffalo Stamping Plant, Hamburg, N.Y.; Cleveland Engine Plants 1 and 2, Brook Park, Ohio; Lima Engine Plant, Lima, Ohio; Ohio Assembly Plant, Avon Lake, Ohio; Sharonville Transmission Pant, Sharonville, Ohio; Sandusky Plastics Plant, Sandusky, Ohio; and Walton Hills Stamping Plant, Walton Hills, Ohio.
Michigan plants covered by this agreement under state OSHA include: Dearborn Tool and Die Plant; Dearborn Truck Plant; Dearborn Diversified Manufacturing Plant; Dearborn Stamping Plant; Dearborn Engine and Fuel Tank Plant; Michigan Assembly Plant in Wayne; Woodhaven Stamping Plant; Livonia Transmission Plant and National PDC in Livonia; Van Dyke Transmission Plant and Sterling Transaxle Plant in Sterling Heights; Romeo Engine Plant; Rawsonville Parts Plant; Brownstown Parts Redistribution Center in Romulus; Woodhaven Forge Plant; and Saline Instruments and Plastics Plant and the Sheldon Road Plant in Plymouth Township.
- Edited by Chris Vavra, Plant Engineering, www.plantengineering.com
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