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Trump's RFK Jr pick leads to stock sell-off by pharmaceutical companies; Mississippians encouraged to prevent diabetes with healthier habits; Ohio study offers new hope for lymphedema care; WI makes innovative strides, but lags in EV adoption.

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Matt Gaetz's nomination raises ethics concerns, Trump's health pick fuels vaccine disinformation worries, a minimum wage boost gains support, California nonprofits mobilize, and an election betting CEO gets raided by FBI.

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Lower voter turnout in cities, not the rural electorate, tipped the presidential election, Minnesota voters OK'd more lottery money to support conservation and clean water, and a survey shows strong broadband lets rural businesses boom.

Government Shutdown: Undermining Workplace Safety?

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Tuesday, October 15, 2013   

PHOENIX - With many safety inspections suspended because of the federal government shutdown, observers say there's an increasing risk for workers and the public. At least half of the staff members at federal safety agencies are furloughed, and many operations that normally keep workers safe on the job have stopped.

Former New Jersey Governor and EPA Administrator Christine Todd Whitman has been a leader in efforts to improve chemical plant safety for years. She pointed to the stalled investigation into the huge explosion at the West Fertilizer Company in Texas that killed 15 people last April.

"This is one of those areas where it should bring home to people the importance of Congress doing its business and getting us back on track, because we can't afford to have this lapse and continue any longer," Whitman declared.

Half of Mine Safety and Health Administration personnel are off work, as are 90 percent of the employees at the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

According to Ronald White, the director of regulatory policy at the Center for Effective Government, federal safety inspectors and investigators have key roles in keeping the nation's construction sites, mines, factories and food processing facilities from becoming deadly, and the longer those work sites drift without inspections, the greater potential for problems.

"The bottom line is that the public and workers are going to see less protection while this government shutdown continues, and it's only going to increase in term of potential risks over time," White warned.

Some conservatives have argued that shutting the government down doesn't matter, but White said many of the federal safety efforts are nearly invisible, until something goes wrong. He pointed to the researchers at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who track multi-state outbreaks of food contamination. At first, most of them had been furloughed as well.

"Because of this most recent outbreak of salmonella in chicken, that has sickened quite a large number, some of those people have actually now in the last few days been called back," he said.

The government shutdown begins its third week today.



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