Without OSHA, I Would Be Dead
by Mark R. Crovelli
by Mark R. Crovelli
DIGG THIS
On June 8th,
2008, just one week after my 29th birthday, my life was
saved by a government bureaucrat working for the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration. It was a day that I will remember for
absolutely the rest of my life. This article is dedicated to the
life and work of the unnamed government agent working for OSHA,
without whose intervention my life would have come to an abrupt
and unceremonious end just a few days ago.
The day
had begun like any other. I had arrived at my roofing company’s
shop during the cool and peaceful hours of that early-summer morning
in order to pick up my truck and multiethnic coworkers. I drank
my usual draught of bitter morning coffee, chewed my early morning
quid, and headed off to a worksite that, unbeknownst to me, very
nearly became the site of my premature death.
I was blissfully
unaware of the pending danger to my life after arriving at the jobsite,
and after setting up ladders to continue installing a new gutter
system on a 4.5 million dollar mansion in the beautiful mountain
community of Evergreen, Colorado. We pulled a 40-foot and a 28-foot
ladder off the truck and set them up to install a perilous piece
of gutter above an exceptionally sloped piece of ground, and still
I was unaware of how close I was to meeting my Maker.
It was
at that time, however, that an agent of the Federal government’s
Occupational Safety and Heath Administration arrived at the jobsite,
like a cherub sent from heaven, in order to save me from falling
to my death off those precariously placed ladders. She was a diminutive
and portly agent, (she could not have been over five feet tall),
and she snuck up on us like a rat from around a shady corner of
the house, clasping her government-issue Plexiglas clipboard and
pen in her plump little hands.
"Who do
you work for?" she shouted at us authoritatively and nasally
from the ground.
"X
Roofing Company," we replied, expecting from experience to
learn that this was the obnoxious member of the nouveau riche
who had the audacity to build such a haughty house for herself,
and to talk to her employees as if they were Cossacks, and she Stalin.
It was at that
point that the stout little bureaucrat intervened in our ordinary
lives to save me from almost certain death. After descending my
ladder, I approached the woman, (with a certain amount of dread
and contempt, I will admit), in order to learn what she wanted from
us. Little did I know that she simply wanted to save my life!
"I’m with
the Safety Administration," she barked at me. "Be careful
with your ladders."
"OK,"
I replied.
Can you even
imagine the relief I felt after this woman informed me that I needed
to be careful while working atop a 40-foot ladder while holding
over thirty feet of galvanized gutter? With over twelve years of
construction experience, the thought had never once occurred to
me that it might be dangerous to work over three stories in the
breezy mountain air perched atop an aluminum ladder! (The amount
of relief I felt after learning that she did not intend to issue
a $20,000 fine, as OSHA agents are wont to do, is also scarcely
even describable). Needless to say, I realized that the rude little
government rat standing before me had been sent by God to keep me
from dying that day.
Thanks
to her intervention that day, I am no longer one of those manly
construction workers who knows very well that OSHA is an obtrusive
and predatory government bureau that is the bane of every small
businessman’s existence. I no longer think of OSHA as a Janus-faced
group of wannabes who use their government-granted power to prey
on those of us who actually can do physically demanding work. On
the contrary! I now know that OSHA consists of a group of people
who run around people’s already hectic lives, without their consent,
in order to warn them about dangers that they already know about,
or should know about. I now know that the endless sucking of tax
monies from men like me to support OSHA was not spent in vain, since
it does actually protect experienced working men from themselves.
OSHA is, as I found out that day, an agency that no working man
could possibly live without.
For those of
you who work in dangerous professions, allow me to say this to you
in conclusion. As one youthful, strong, rugby-playing, roofing,
man to another, you should thank God every day for the existence
of this nosy, overbearing, and extortionist group of government
bureaucrats. For, without flabby, women OSHA agents, we would scarcely
know how to keep ourselves alive. Thank God we do not have a free
market in construction!
June
19, 2008
Mark R.
Crovelli [send him mail]
writes from Denver, Colorado.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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