No COSH group in your area? Start your own!!
Here's some suggestions on how to get started:
- Don’t reinvent the wheel! Many others have gone through the difficult
experience of starting a COSH organization and can save you a huge amount of
time and effort by sharing their experiences and resources.
Contact the National COSH
Network Coordinator or one of the COSH groups listed on the above pages
to get started gathering ideas.
- Plan to start small. Getting a low-budget non-profit organization off the
ground is a challenging task. Don’t expect to build a large, financially
stable organization in a matter of months.
- Contact union locals in your area, share your idea with them, and ask them
to send a representative to an initial planning meeting. If you aren’t
sure where to find them, you can start by contacting the health and safety
departments of some international unions, who could put you in touch with
local contacts. Some of the internationals that have active health and
safety departments are: the UAW,
UFCW, ,
UNITE!,
AFSCME, Steelworkers,
Machinists, CWA,
APWU, Teamsters,
PACE,
and others.
- Contact health and technical professionals who are interested in worker
health and safety. You may try making contact with a local public health
school, with a local chapter of the American Society of Safety Engineers, or
contact the Occupational
Safety and Health section of the American Public Health Association to
look for members in your area.
- Reach out to progressive organizations that work with groups of
particularly vulnerable workers, such as immigrants or day laborers—people
who are often most exploited and most likely to suffer from unsafe working
conditions.
- Start building a Board of Directors. In order to incorporate your
organization and be legally able to raise funds, you will need a Board of
Directors. Many states have a Non-Profit Center that can give you guidance
on this process.
- Start building a dues-paying membership. Most COSH groups get the majority
of their funding from grants—either state or federal grant programs or
foundation grants. But the only way you can get in the running for one of
these grants is to build a constituency and build a membership. You need to
demonstrate to grantors that there are people out there who care about your
cause and believe in your organization. This means making a commitment of
some money, however small an amount.
- Identify key worker health and safety issues in your area. If you are
thinking about starting a COSH group, you probably have some ideas already
about what these issues are. But bring together other folks in your
community—representatives of a variety of unions and community groups, as
well as health and technical professionals-- to get their input on the key
issues. Every community is different and every COSH group has a different
agenda.
- Educate yourself on your community/your state’s OSH situation. Are you
under federal OSHA jurisdiction or under a state OSHA plan? Where are the
most hazardous worksites in your proposed service area? (Much of this
information is available through OSHA’s searchable database on its
website.) How effective is your state’s workers’ compensation law? The
AFL-CIO's Health and Safety
Department has an excellent publication called Death on the Job
that compares worker health and safety protections in all 50 states. A summary
is available on their website or you may order the full report. See their
website for details.