Body Found in Humboldt Bay Identified as Missing Eureka Woman, Sheriff Says

LoCO Staff / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 4:27 p.m. / Crime

PREVIOUSLY: Woman’s Body Found in Humboldt Bay

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Press release from the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office:

On Dec. 10 at approximately 9:30 a.m., the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office was dispatched to Comet St. near Samoa for the report of a body that appeared to be deceased floating near a dock in the Humboldt Bay. 

A Special Services Division Deputy arrived at the scene, moved the body to the shore, and confirmed that the body was a deceased female. The Deputy Coroner was then called to the scene and the Major Crimes Division also sent personnel as a precaution.

The decedent has been identified as Krystal Shinka, age 43, of Eureka. Shinka was reported as a missing person to the Eureka Police Department on Dec. 9, with the reporter stating that Shinka had not been seen since Dec. 5. 

Shinka’s autopsy is scheduled for later this week. Shinka’s manner of death has not been determined at this time and the case is still under investigation.

Anyone with information about this case or related criminal activity is encouraged to call the Humboldt County Sheriff’s Office at (707) 445-7251 or the Sheriff’s Office Crime Tip line at (707) 268-2539.

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MORE →


‘A Game-Changer for Humboldt’: State Sen. Mike McGuire, County Officials Announce Additional Funding for Behavioral Crisis Triage Center in Arcata

Isabella Vanderheiden / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 3:45 p.m. / Mental Health

State Sen. Mike McGuire, DHHS Director Connie Beck and Behavioral Health Director Emi Botzler-Rodgers announce additional funding for the up-and-coming triage center in Arcata. | Photos: Andrew Goff

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With nearly $20 million in the bank – and a little help from State Sen. Mike McGuire – the Humboldt County Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and Mad River Community Hospital are ready to launch the design phase of a 43-bed Behavioral Health Crisis Triage Center in Arcata. 

Aimed at expanding local access to mental health services, the state-of-the-art facility will include a sobering center, behavioral health and crisis stabilization services for people of all ages, regardless of insurance, with stays ranging from less than 24 hours to 90 days. The proposed plans include 12 crisis stabilization beds – six for adults and six for children and teens – 12 sobering cots, 10 crisis residential beds for dual-diagnosis of mental health and substance use disorders, and nine mental health crisis residential beds. 

At a press briefing this morning, McGuire underscored the importance of increasing critical resources for people in acute crisis, especially in rural communities.

“[W]e are finally making progress on one of the biggest challenges that this county and rural California faces … and we couldn’t be more thrilled to be working with the county, the Board of Supervisors and, of course, all of the hospital leadership who have led this all-hands-on-deck effort,” McGuire said. “Mental health has to have parity with physical health, and we’re doing it now in Humboldt. We’re putting our money where our mouth is and getting these facilities built.”

DHHS Director Connie Beck highlighted the services that will be offered at the sobering center, a short-term care facility where people who are intoxicated can safely recover and/or detox from alcohol or other drugs. Beck noted that sobering centers are relatively rare in California. As of November 2020, there were less than a dozen sobering centers in California – a quarter of the nation’s total – according to the California Health Care Foundation.

Connie Beck

“The sobering center will allow someone to come in, [stay] for up to 24 hours and really be assessed for what that need is,” Beck said. “Whether it’s addiction … or whether that’s going on to crisis or longer-term residential treatment, all of those services being in one location and being able to move through that process will be really important for them.”

“This is really going to be a game-changer for Humboldt,” she added.

Behavioral Health Director Emi Botzler-Rodgers added that the triage center will help the local health care providers “address stigma and discrimination in ways that haven’t always been addressed.”

“These partnerships … really demonstrate the community’s commitment to look at mental illness and substance use, how people are suffering and how we can offer dignified care,” Botzler-Rodgers said. “It’s really hopeful and inspiring for me.”

The project has received $19.8 million to date. Last year, the county was awarded $12.36 million in grant funding from the California Department of Health Care Services’ Behavioral Health Continuum Infrastructure Program. The county has kicked down approximately $2.5 million for the project. Another $5 million is coming from McGuire and private funding sources.

“I believe that we’re going to need to raise another five to six million to be able to close the final gap,” McGuire said. “It’s very common in a large project like this that you get the majority of the dollars in the bank, move forward onto the construction [phase], and that will also build momentum. We are firm in our belief that by the end of the 2025 calendar year, we’ll have the full [funding] allocation secured.”

Mad River Community Hospital donated the land for the triage center. While the exact location of the has yet to be determined, the facility will be built somewhere on the hospital’s 40-acre campus.

The Behavioral Health Crisis Triage Center is slated for completion by the end of 2026.

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Mad River Community Hospital in Arcata




Drug Task Force Arrests Man for Alleged ‘Ghost Gun’ Manufacturing in Cutten Today

LoCO Staff / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 2:04 p.m. / Crime

Photo: HCDTF.

Press release from the Humboldt County Drug Task Force:

On December 11, 2024, Agents with the Humboldt County Drug Task Force (HCDTF) served a search warrant on Zachary Michael Osborne (age 27), and his residence located in 2000 block of Aldo Court in Eureka. During the months of November and December, the HCDTF received information that Osborne was using controlled substances and manufacturing firearms with a 3D printer inside of his residence. Osborne was previously arrested on December 5, 2024, for being in possession of a non-serialized firearm and a controlled substance.

Upon HCDTF’s arrival at Osborne’s residence, he was detained at the front door without incident. During the search of Osborne’s residence, Agents located a functional 3D printer connected to a computer. Agents observed several programs on the computer depicting “blueprints” designed to create firearm lower receivers and firearm components with the 3D printer.

Agents also located several spools of 3D printer filament, four complete pistol upper receivers, two incomplete handgun lowers, multiple firearm components for manufacturing handguns, ammunition, a second 3D printer, and multiple items indicative of drug paraphernalia.

At the conclusion of the search warrant, Osborne was transported to the Humboldt County Correctional Facility and booked on the following charges:

  • 11366 HS Operating/maintaining a drug house
  • 29180 PC Illegally manufacturing firearms.
  • 30305 PC Prohibited person possessing ammunition

Anyone with information related to this investigation or other narcotics related crimes are encouraged to call the Humboldt County Drug Task Force at 707-267-9976.



Smoky in Trinidad? That’s From Green Diamond Prescribed Burns

Hank Sims / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 11:18 a.m. / Non-Emergencies

Friends o’ the LoCO are telling us that there’s plenty of smoke up Trinidad way at the moment. Here is the reason for that.

Press release from Green Diamond:

Weather conditions permitting, Green Diamond Resource Company plans to conduct prescribed burning  for fuel hazard reduction today, December 11th, 2024 in multiple locations across the ownership.  Burning will be conducted in the Bald Hills off of Johnson Road, in the vicinity of Pollnow Peak approximately 8 miles east of the town of Westhaven, 1 mile east of Patrick’s Point north of the town Trinidad, and near the Winchuck River in Southern Oregon. 

Burning operations are implemented in coordination with CAL FIRE, North Coast Unified Air Quality Management District and Oregon Department of Forestry.  Please note that smoke may be visible in surrounding areas, including Highway 101 near Trinidad, Westhaven, Patrick’s Point, Big Lagoon, form Johnson Road in the Bald Hills, and from Winchuck River Road while prescribed burning activities are being conducted.  Green Diamond staff will be onsite monitoring prescribed burning and fuels reduction operations. 



Rep. Jared Huffman Seeking Feedback on Draft Offshore Wind Legislation That Would Guarantee Money for Tribes

LoCO Staff / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 10:38 a.m. / Energy

Huffman, on Woodley Island, speaks about federal funding for the Harbor District’s offshore wind efforts earlier this year. File photo: Andrew Goff.

Press release from the office of Rep. Jared Huffman:

Today, U.S. Representative Jared Huffman (CA-02) unveiled the Resilience, Equity, and Sustainability Through Offshore Renewable Energy (RESTORE) Act—a groundbreaking bill that, for the first time, guarantees that tribes and coastal communities have a dedicated share of revenues from offshore renewable energy development.

In an effort to engage diverse perspectives, interests, and needs of tribal, coastal, and environmental justice communities and all those with a stake in our nation’s clean energy future, Rep. Huffman is releasing a discussion draft of the legislation. Policymakers, advocates, and members of the public are invited to visit this link to read the draft legislation and provide feedback.

“Despite their deep knowledge and stewardship of natural resources, tribes have faced systemic barriers and injustices in infrastructure development, resulting in chronic underfunding and limited capacity to participate in, let alone benefit from, projects in and around their ancestral territories. Our transition to clean energy is the perfect opportunity to not only address climate change, but to right these historic wrongs and create a more sustainable future for tribal and coastal communities,” said Rep. Huffman. “It’s time for the federal government to do more than just ‘consult’ impacted tribes as a ministerial exercise when projects are developed; tribes should be at the table from the beginning and all the way through the process, with an opportunity to meaningfully share in the economic benefits of clean energy. This draft legislation is intended to reflect that vision, and I look forward to gathering feedback to improve our ideas in future iterations.”

Major components of the RESTORE Act include:

  • Revenue Distribution: Instead of allocating all royalties from offshore renewable energy to the Treasury, as current law provides, royalties would be divided between the Treasury, the Coastal Conservation and Community Resilience Fund, tribes (for economic development and mitigation), the National Ocean and Coastal Security Fund (NOCSF), the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and grants for fisheries and scientific research.

  • Coastal Conservation and Community Resilience Fund: Directs revenue to support coastal communities in preparing for and responding to environmental threats, including climate change, sea-level rise, and habitat loss. The fund promotes collaboration with tribes and incorporates indigenous knowledge to foster equitable and inclusive solutions.

  • Mitigation and Economic Development for Tribes: Seeks to rectify historical injustices and promote energy sovereignty by providing funding for tribes to mitigate impacts and ultimately benefit from the economic development of offshore renewable energy projects.

  • Fisheries and Scientific Research: Provides funding for grants to academic institutions, NGOs, state, tribal, and local governments to conduct surveys, data collection, and research for the management of fisheries, protected species, habitats, ecosystems, and overall ocean conditions. Also supports the fishing industry through targeted research to better understand and manage interactions between marine ecosystems and energy projects.

The RESTORE Act is supported by the Blue Lake Rancheria, Penobscot Nation, Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians, Natural Resources Defense Council, Center for Biological Diversity, National Ocean Protection Coalition, and Southern Environmental Law Center.

What Supporters are Saying

“Blue Lake Rancheria (BLR) emphatically supports Congressman Huffman’s Resilience, Equity, and Sustainability Through Offshore Renewable Energy (RESTORE) proposal. It recognizes the value and importance of Tribal Resilience and Self-Determination. In the past, Tribal Nations have been disproportionately harmed by extractive practices and related harms such as increases in Murdered Missing Indigenous People. This proposed Bill provides coastal Tribes with the resources to combat such harms while also situated them as key constituents in advancing clean energy,” said Jason Ramos, Acting Chair of the Blue Lake Rancheria.

 [DISCLOSURE: The Blue Lake Rancheria is a minority owner of the Outpost’s and KSLG’s parent company, Lost Coast Communications, Inc.]

“Since time immemorial the Chumash people have lived in harmony with the waters off the California Central Coast,” said Kenneth Kahn, Chairman of the Santa Ynez Band of Chumash Indians. “I believe that our cultural history and wind energy can co-exist in those waters, but only if our tribe has information about the impacts of its development and the resources to monitor construction, maintenance, and operation of wind farms. I am grateful that Congressman Huffman is working to make sure tribal stakeholders have the opportunity to use wind energy leases to protect and restore our heritage, and I look forward to working with him to fine tune his discussion draft in the days to come.”

“Like many other Tribal Nations, the Penobscot Nation supports the progress of renewable energy development, but such development must be done in a manner that minimizes and mitigates harms on the ocean and other waters, and the wildlife that depend on such waters. Development must also include consultation with any impacted Tribal Nations. Congressman Jared Huffman’s legislation will help ensure that Tribal Nations are able to access the resources needed to have a meaningful and productive voice in the conversation. We look forward to working with Rep. Huffman as he advances his legislation,” said Penobscot Nation Chief Kirk Francis.

Background

The new discussion draft builds on the work Rep. Huffman has done to promote a clean energy transition and ensure tribes equally benefit from the economic impacts of renewable projects like offshore wind development.

This March, Rep. Huffman hosted Department of the Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and Acting Secretary of Labor Julie Su in the North Coast earlier for a series of visits and roundtables to hear tribal concerns surrounding offshore wind. In May, Rep. Huffman sent an urgent letter to U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) Director Elizabeth Klein requesting the agency place a senior-level official in California to oversee tribal participation in offshore wind development and be responsive to tribal needs. Shortly after, he led efforts to call on the administration to prioritize tribal consultation and to specifically urge BOEM to prioritize early and meaningful engagement with tribes regarding offshore wind projects. The letter highlighted five recommendations for BOEM to address tribes’ ongoing concerns with offshore wind development.

As part of his advocacy for tribes, Rep. Huffman introduced a bill to increase public safety for tribal citizens by promoting cooperation and information sharing between tribal, state, and local law enforcement agencies.

Earlier this year, Representative Huffman helped secure $426.7 million for the Humboldt Bay Harbor, Recreation, and Conservation District for construction and maintenance of offshore wind infrastructure. The program received a substantial funding increase through the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, which Rep. Huffman and Senator Padilla helped get passed last Congress.

Representative Huffman has long been a strong advocate for expanding the production and use of renewable energy, including offshore wind. Huffman previously applauded the Biden administration’s offshore wind energy lease sale off the coast of Central and Northern California in 2022, the first offshore wind lease sale off the West Coast. Last year, he announced $8.6 million for the Humboldt Bay Harbor, Recreation, and Conservation District through the Department of Transportation Maritime Administration’s FY 2023 Port Infrastructure Development Program.

Additional Resources

Text of the bill can be found here.

A one-pager of the bill can be found here.

A section by section of the bill can be found here.



Spare a Thought for the City of Chico Today, After a Devastating Fire Claimed its Most Beloved Building

LoCO Staff / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 10:16 a.m. / Elsewhere

Bidwell Mansion. By © Frank Schulenburg, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link

As historic small Northern California towns with state universities, Humboldt and Chico have always been twins of a sort.

Today comes the news that the Bidwell Mansion — a lovely old building that serves as a centerpiece of the town, and a California State Historic Park — burned to the ground early this morning.

The mansion had been undergoing renovations in the last year. The cause of the fire is still unknown.

It’s a pretty devastating loss for Chico. Imagine if we lost the Carson Mansion — it would be like that, but maybe even worse, given how much Chico loved the thing. And it was public property.

Here’s a story from the Chico Enterprise-Record. National news is starting to pick up on it.

Anyway: Really sad.

After the fire. By Frank Schulenburg - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link



Fewer California Workers Were Dying on the Job. Then Fentanyl Happened

Jeanne Kuang and Jeremia Kimelman / Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024 @ 7:33 a.m. / Sacramento

As the nation continues to struggle with an opioid crisis now supercharged by fentanyl, overdoses have become one of the leading causes of workplace deaths.

California is no different: Workplace overdose deaths have risen so dramatically that in 2021 and 2022, they caused more fatalities than falls at construction sites or being hit by machinery, and in 2022 were second only to car crashes and other transportation incidents.

That year, the toll surpassed 110 workers, accounting for 18% of the state’s workplace deaths, compared to 11% nationwide.

Federal and state government experts have raised the alarm over this trend, which has puzzled some policymakers because drug use is not a hazard created directly by the job. After all, those who die of an overdose at work represent a small share of thousands of Californians who overdose each year.

Still, business owners and union officials alike are increasingly having to grapple with one of the nation’s most prominent public health challenges.

“When fentanyl came around, we started having a huge uptick in overdoses and deaths — even suicides,” said Paul Moreno, president of Ironworkers Local 433 in Southern California.

In 2022, his local began holding recovery meetings for members that now draw as many as a dozen attendees a month. Moreno, who said he’s been sober 19 years, visits worksites and the union hall passing around the 988 mental health crisis hotline number, giving out his own personal phone number and distributing doses of the overdose reversal drug naloxone (commonly sold as Narcan).

“I took Narcan classes, I passed out Narcan on the job sites. I never thought I’d be doing that,” he said. “The phone calls from the members, sometimes I don’t know what to say, besides listen. We still need more training.”

A new California law directs the state’s workplace safety agencies to require worksites to stock Narcan in their first aid kits, but the regulations haven’t been issued yet. A spokesperson said Cal/OSHA is “in the early stages of rulemaking,” a process that could take years.

Not much is publicly known about overdose deaths at California worksites. A small office in Cal/OSHA that compiles workplace fatality data has for at least the past two years noted the rise in overdoses in its annual reports. But the office says it cannot release details due to privacy restrictions.

The agency has not responded to a public records request CalMatters filed in September for all overdose incidents, fatal or nonfatal, that have been reported at worksites.

State won’t release details on deaths

County coroners’ offices, which investigate some deaths, vary widely in whether they can identify incidents based on whether a person died at their job. Death records from the past three years obtained from Alameda, San Bernardino and Riverside counties provide glimpses into the grim trend.

In 2021, a flooring installer stepped out for a smoke break at a construction site in Temecula, and was found by coworkers on the side of the house, dead from a fentanyl overdose. A packing plant worker in Corona went to the bathroom and did not return; coworkers found him bent over with a straw, lighter and piece of foil nearby, having overdosed on methamphetamine, fentanyl and heroin. In Fremont, a manager found a night-shift janitor in the bathroom with a white powdery substance, overdosed on fentanyl. In Livermore this year, a driver was found in his parked semi-truck as he waited to make a scheduled delivery, also dead from fentanyl.

First: Narcan nasal spray containers available at a rally at the First Street U.S. Courthouse in Los Angeles on April 22, 2024. Photo by Ted Soqui for CalMatters Last: Housing construction in a neighborhood in Elk Grove on July 8, 2022. Photo by Rahul Lal, CalMatters

California officials have little to say about the rising death toll. Cal/OSHA refused to make an official available for an interview and would not explain why overdoses account for a much higher share of the state’s workplace deaths compared to the rest of the nation.

Instead, the agency cited the broader national opioid crisis. “California had more than 7,000 people die from opioid-related overdose deaths in 2022,” spokesperson Erika Monterroza wrote in an email. “Unfortunately, these deaths happen all over our state, including in our workplaces.”

The state Department of Public Health says it is considering a study. That agency’s occupational health branch is “aware of this issue and is considering a project to examine all opioid overdoses by industry and occupation,” a spokesperson said. In October, the department said staff are in the “initial stages of preparing for an analysis” but did not provide a completion date.

Studies in other states indicate the problem is worse in certain industries. In Massachusetts, where overdoses are the top cause of workplace deaths, researchers with the state public health agency examined all overdoses deaths — whether at work or not — and found deaths occurred disproportionately among those working in manual-labor, high-injury industries.

Those jobs, said Emily Sparer-Fine, director of the Massachusetts public health agency’s Occupational Health Surveillance Program, are often seasonal or unstable, and workers may be financially strained and pressured to work through pain.

“Certain industries and occupations, (such as) construction, fishing, had a much higher rate of overdose,” Sparer-Fine said in an interview. “But it was also jobs that had lower access to paid sick leave, higher rates of job insecurity, higher rates of overall workplace injury.”

In a new study this year, Sparer-Fine’s team also dug into workers’ compensation data and found working-age Massachusetts residents were 35% more likely to have died of an overdose if they were previously injured on the job.

Workers in similar industries are overrepresented in the California workplace overdose deaths, including in trucking and warehousing, according to federal data.

So are workers in construction, where unions and employers are confronting a mental health and addiction crisis. Nationwide, construction workers are more likely than workers in any other profession to overdose, and also have one of the highest rates of suicide.

Chris Trahan Cain, executive director of the national Center for Construction Research and Training, has since 2018 led the response to the industry’s opioid crisis. She has focused on a longtime reliance on painkillers to deal with injuries involving the muscles and bones, which nearly a third of construction workers report experiencing. Studies like the ones in Massachusetts were among the first to reveal the toll.

The center, formed by the nation’s construction unions, has recommended stocking naloxone in union halls, requiring apprentices be taught about opioid abuse and ensuring members have coverage of drug treatment programs. They’re also providing tips on talking to doctors about how to treat injuries without long-term opioids prescriptions. The goal, Cain said, is to avoid blaming individual workers.

“When this information first came to light, what I heard was, ‘Oh, it’s just the macho culture, it’s the type of people who go into construction,’” she said. “We can’t tell you how many of these deaths are because somebody started on a prescription, but we know that some of them are. We know a lot of these deaths are also from illicit drug use that have nothing to do with workplaces, but where we can (make) changes as an industry to impact these numbers, is what we’re trying to do.”

Businesses respond to crisis

Employers, too, are trying to break the stigma for seeking help. Since 2021, the Associated General Contractors of California has provided materials to hold jobsite meetings about mental health.

Not all employers know how to raise the issue and some fear reprisal for appearing to pry into employees’ personal lives, said Frank Nunes, CEO of the Wall and Ceiling Alliance, a Northern California specialty contractors’ group. Some, Nunes said, are advised by attorneys to avoid talking about it.

“It’s still very sensitive,” he said. “You’ve got to be very careful how you ask somebody how (they’re) doing and not offend them.”

Still, Nunes joined officials of District Council 16 of the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades at a recovery event in San Leandro in October, promoting treatment programs covered by their contracts and encouraging workers to use them.

“We have to address these things in the field,” he told about 100 union members. “There’s a cultural change we all need to work on.”

In a cavernous training hall where apprentices learn how to install drywall, union members told their peers how they had recovered from addiction. The union invited former Raiders tight end Darren Waller to talk about his own experiences with addiction and depression.

Reflecting on union officials’ numbers on construction worker deaths by overdose or suicide, Waller told the crowd: “Those are lives that still deserve to be among us.”

Robert Williams, the local’s business manager and secretary-treasurer, described what he called a familiar scenario: A worker experiences a jobsite injury or persistent soreness, feels pressure to work through it, then escalates from an over-the-counter pill to a prescription painkiller to an illicit opioid addiction.

“We’re only with our families a small portion of the day,” he said. “The people we work with, we’re with 80% of the time. We’ve got to be open on those job sites.”

Robert Williams, left, business manager and secretary-treasurer, and James Boster, right, director of mental health and addiction, with District Council 16 of the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades, at their union office in Livermore on Nov. 6, 2024. Photo by Laure Andrillon for CalMatters

The union and local employers realized they had a problem on their hands last summer. After sifting through their health plan records, they found 91 members had died of overdose or suicide (not necessarily at work) in 18 months.

The revelation forced union officials to rethink their roles in workers’ lives, Williams said in an interview.

“We look out for safety on the jobs, so if there’s a death on a job site because of a safety hazard, it’s front-page news,” he said. “But if there’s death by an overdose or death by suicide of a construction worker when they go home, nobody talks about that. So instead of thinking about just the safety side, it’s that holistic side of, how do we make somebody better for themselves and their families?”

Williams quickly appointed a director of addiction and mental health. James Boster, himself in recovery from a painkiller addiction he said he developed after a non-work injury, speaks at apprenticeship programs and worksites, helps workers get into recovery programs and acts as a crisis counselor.

In the past year, Boster said he’s helped place 51 union members into residential or outpatient treatment programs. During a recent interview at the union’s headquarters in Livermore, he said he was anxious: He had secured a “scholarship” for one member who hadn’t logged enough hours in recent months to have full health coverage, but the worker had chosen to postpone treatment.

“I can never walk away from a member, and something happens, and not hold that personally,” Boster said.

Boster and Williams are eager to expand their program. Ideas include installing someone with Boster’s role across the district’s 20 local unions and establishing a fund to help members who haven’t worked enough hours to afford treatment.

“I took Narcan classes, I passed out Narcan on the job sites. I never thought I’d be doing that.”
— Paul Moreno, president of Ironworkers Local 433 in Southern California

Other advocates, meanwhile, have pushed the state to require naloxone at worksites as part of an overall strategy to reduce overdoses.

Earlier this year, the National Safety Council, an advocacy group, petitioned California labor agencies to do just that. Proponents said the medication, which can temporarily reverse an overdose by blocking the brain’s opioid receptors, is easy to administer and not harmful.

Citing its workplace death data, Cal/OSHA supported the proposal before the independent Occupational Safety & Health Standards Board, which decides whether to approve such regulations.

“It’s in the top two or three killers of workers now, and just a few years ago, it was a very small number,” Eric Berg, Cal/OSHA deputy chief of health and research and standards, said at a June 20 board meeting. “So it’s just become a really serious problem for workers, and it’s killing workers. I think we have an obligation to act.”

But board members hesitated. Chairperson David Alioto called the proposal an “odd request.” While addiction is a legitimate public health concern, it’s not a workplace hazard like wildfire smoke for employees who must work outside, he said.

“I have not seen a regulation where an employer is providing a remedy for a risk that the employer did not create,” Alioto said.

Board members also said they worried about whether all businesses would be able to store the medication at the right temperature, and whether employers would bear liability over the medication’s use.

The standards board ultimately voted for the agency to discuss the matter before an advisory committee. In September, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law directing Cal/OSHA to draft a workplace naloxone rule by December 2027 and giving the board until December 2028 to consider it. So far, no advisory committee has met.

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Share your story: We want to hear from workers, family members and employers. If you have experience with addiction, mental health or overdose on a job site, and you’re willing to share your story with a CalMatters reporter, please reach out to jeanne@calmatters.org.

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