Sweltering summer heat might have been more bearable for outdoor workers in Miami-Dade County under a proposal that suggested mandated breaks in the shade on the hottest days – but Florida said no.
The county’s proposal to establish heat rules for workers has been preempted by a new law: Florida has joined Texas in banning such local rules for outdoor workers. Meanwhile, California, Colorado, Minnesota, Oregon and Washington have passed laws giving more protections to construction workers who work in extreme heat.
Florida’s new law has frustrated and angered some experts and advocates for construction workers and farmworkers. As summers get hotter over the years, outdoor workers will need more protections, not fewer, said Luigi Guadarrama, political director of Sierra Club Florida said.
The law will primarily affect low-income workers of color, Guadarrama said: “Currently, the state legislature has no interest in protecting workers."
Other advocates also say more protections for outdoor workers are needed.
Not even businesses want this, it’s just performative cruelty at this point.
Businesses can still follow safety procedures, they just aren’t required to by law.
Often businesses like regulations because then they don’t have the pressure of a race to the bottom. Depends on the industry and the regulation obviously
It solves the prisoner’s dilemma problem. If my rival doesn’t protect workers, he can finish jobs cheaper and then put me out of business, etc
It’s called the Commons problem or common goods problem
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_good_(economics)