Thousands of workers die or are injured because of on-the-job accidents each year. Many more are exposed to conditions that cause serious illnesses years later.

When does a worker have the right to refuse dangerous work?

On February 26, 1980, the United States Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling which more clearly defined a worker's right to refuse work where an employee(s) has (have) reasonable apprehension that death or serious injury or illness might occur as a result of performing the work.

The unanimous decision came in a 1974 case against Whirlpool Corporation in which two workers refused to crawl out on a screen from which a co-worker had fallen to his death only nine days earlier.

A Cincinnati, Ohio appeals court ruled in favor of the worker's rights in "Whirlpool"  and the Supreme Court affirmed that decision. (At the time the Supreme Court took the Whirlpool case, there were two other appeals court decisions which had gone the other way. These cases were by courts in New Orleans in 1977 and Denver in 1978.)

 The two workers in the "Whirlpool" case were told to go out on a screen 20 feet above the floor to retrieve small appliance parts which had fallen from a conveyor belt system above.

The screen was in place to protect workers in the plant from falling parts. The retrieval assignment had resulted in other workers falling partially or completely through the screen.

Claiming that the screen was unsafe, two employees refused to carry out the assignment. Whirlpool supervisors sent the workers home for the day and withheld about six hours pay.

 The Court, in its decision, emphasized that the OSHA Act provides a worker with the right to choose not to perform an  assigned task due to reasonable apprehension of death or serious  injury coupled with a reasonable belief that no less drastic alternative is available.

Further, the Court held that a worker who utilizes this OSHA protection may not be discriminated against for such action.

 However, the Court also indicated that an employee who refusedwork based on the regulation runs the risk of discharge or reprimand in the event a court subsequently finds that he/she acted unreasonably or in bad faith.

 As noted, the employer docked the two workers about six hours  pay in the Whirlpool case. The Supreme Court ruled that the OSHA Act does not require an employer to pay a worker who  refuses to perform an assigned task in the face of imminent danger. Rather, the Act simply provides that in such cases the employer may not discriminate against the involved worker(s).

Thus, the Court has left this issue to be decided by labor and management through collective bargaining. Members of unions  that do not negotiate the necessary protective language in their contracts should not expect to be paid for the refusal to work period. This will be true even where an employer is found guilty of violating the OSHA Act.

 In light of the Supreme Court's decision, what should CWA members who are faced with an imminent danger situation do?

 The Supreme Court has said that a worker may refuse unsafe work where he/she has refused the job in good faith. Good faith may be interpreted as an honest belief that the job was unsafe  and where the job was unusually and objectively dangerous.

Good faith can be demonstrated by the manner by which you refuse unsafe work:

  • Explain the hazard to the supervisor and your steward;
  • Offer to do other, safe work until the hazard is corrected;
  • Give management a chance to respond before doing anything else;
  • If the condition isn't corrected, call OSHA and request an  "imminent danger" inspection;
  • Do not walk off the job. If management won't fix the hazard, force them to take the next step. Make sure you have expressed your reasons for refusing the job and your willingness to do other work, clearly and in the presence of your steward or other workers.

If you're fired or disciplined:

  • file a grievance immediately;
  • file an unfair labor practice charge with the NLRB immediately but within 180 days;
  • file a section 11(c) discrimination complaint with OSHA immediately but within 30 days.


The bottom line is to stay cool. Don't let management provoke you into rash actions which could hurt your case later.

Proving that your job was "abnormally and objectively dangerous" is a matter of documentation:

  • Was the job one you'd never done before? Or, had the conditions of the job changed recently?
  • Did you protest the job before?
  • Did other workers protest the job before?
  • Did others refuse to do the job?
  • Was the company in violation of OSHA, state or local health and safety regulations?
    Many chemicals and conditions are clearly dangerous but aren't covered by any standards. Have workers been injured or made sick doing your job? Just what chemicals were you working with?

If any CWA member refuses unsafe work, he/she should notify the Local Union President. In turn, this information should be made available to the CWA Representative, and the CWA Occupational Safety and Health Department.

What Can You Do?

All CWA members should make sure that their employer ismaintaining a safe and healthful workplace. The key to making the workplace safe for all CWA members is strong, active Local safety and health committees. The committee can identify dangerous conditions at the workplace and discuss them with management. If the company refuses to cooperate, the committee can request an OSHA inspection. The committee should always coordinate its activities through the Local officers, the CWA Representative and negotiated safety and health committees.

In addition, CWA members may obtain information and assistance by contacting:

CWA Occupational Safety and Health Department
501 Third Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20001-2797
Phone: (202) 434-1160

Occupational Safety & Health Links

Government Agencies

Agency for Toxic Substance and Disease Registry (ATSDR)
Bureau of Labor Statistics: Compensation and Working Conditions (DOL)
California Electronic News Gathering (ENG) Standard
Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board (CSB)
Department of Energy (DOE) Employee Safety & Health
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) EnviroFacts
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)
Federal Railroad Administration (US DOT)
Hazmat Safety (US Department of Transportation)
Health Evaluation System and Information Services (HESIS)
Household Products Database (the National Institutes of Health)
Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA)
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
New Jersey Right to Know Program (NJRTK)
Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA)
OSHA: Whistleblower Protection
Washington State Ergonomics Program : Recalled

Occupational Safety & Health Information

American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH)
American Industrial Hygiene Association (AIHA)
American National Standards Institute
Americans with Disabilities Act
CTD News
Environmental Defense Fund: Chemical Scoreboard (EDF)
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society
Microwave News
National Safety Council
Right to Know Net Environmental Database

Unions and Committees on Occupational Safety and Health (COSH)

AFL-CIO Safety & Health on the Job
American Federation of Government Employees
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
American Federation of Teachers
California Coalition for Workers Occupational Safety & Health Protection (WORKSAFE!)
Chicago Area Committee on Occupational Safety & Health (CACOSH)
Graphic Communications International Union
Labor Occupational Health Program: University of California/Berkeley (LOHP)
Labor Occupational Safety and Health: University of California/Los Angeles (LOSH)
Massachusetts Committee on Occupational Safety & Health (MassCOSH)
National COSH Network
New Jersey Work Environment Council (NJWEC)
New York Committee for Occupational Safety and Health (NYCOSH)
Philadelphia Area Project on Occupational Safety and Health (Philaposh)
Rail Workers Hazardous Materials Training
Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition
Southeast Michigan Coalition on Occupational Safety (SEMCOSH)
United Auto Workers (UAW)

Public Health & Support

Alliance for a Healthy Tomorrow (Massachusetts)
American Public Health Association (APHA)
Association of Occupational and Environmental Clinics (AOEC)
Body Burden: The Pollution In People (The Environmental Working Group)
Center for Health, Environment and Justice
Center for Labor Education and Research: University of Alabama/Birmingham (CLEAR)
CorpWatch: Holding Corporations Accountable
Council for Disability Rights
Ecology Center
Government Accountability Project: Whistleblower Protection
Healthcare Without Harm
Job Accommodation Network (JAN)
Maquiladora Health & Safety Support Network
Science and Environmental Health Network

International Resources

ActWorkCover (Australia)
Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU)
Baltic Sea Network on Occupational Health and Safety (Scandinavia)
Canadian Auto Workers (CAW)
Canadian Centre for Occupational Safety and Health (CCOHS)
Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE)
Communication Workers Union (Britain)
Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union (CEP) of Canada
European Agency for Safety and Health at Work (European Union)
GMB Health & Environment (Britain)
Hazards Magazine (Britain)
Health & Safety Authority (Ireland)
Health & Safety Executive (Britain)
International Labour Organization (ILO) Safe Work
National Institute for Working Life (Sweden)
New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZTU)
Ontario Ministry of Labour: Health & Safety
Trades Union Congress (TUC), Britain
Transport & General Workers Union (Britain)
Worksafe BC Health & Safety Centre (British Columbia)