WASHINGTON -- During the 2012 presidential campaign, Wisconsin
businessman Lance Johnson said President Barack Obama's workplace safety
inspectors were burdening him and killing jobs with too much red tape.
"I've
never been audited by more government agencies in my life than I have
under Obama," Johnson, president of Johnson Brass & Machine Foundry
Inc., in Saukville, Wisconsin, told The Wall Street Journal in a Nov. 2, 2012, campaign story.
On Monday, Johnson's foundry was the site of a horrifying industrial accident.
As reported
by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, a "catastrophic failure" of
machinery sprayed molten metal on workers, injuring eight and sending
four of them to the hospital. According to a statement from Johnson
issued Tuesday, the molten metal hit workers on their legs and backs.
None of the injuries were life-threatening.
"For more than one
hundred years my family has taken great pride in our safety record and
our close relationship with our employees," Johnson said in a statement.
"As the fourth president of this family-owned business, I can say we
are all deeply saddened by the accident at our plant."
Speaking to
the Journal in 2012, Johnson claimed that OSHA, which is tasked with
monitoring the health and safety of workplaces, was subjecting him to
duplicative audits. The story detailed how most of the U.S. business
community was throwing its weight behind GOP presidential nominee Mitt
Romney rather than Obama, in part because of the incumbent president's
"aggressive regulators."
That sentiment quite clearly applied to Johnson.
Johnson
claimed the cost of dealing with those unnecessary OSHA audits went
"well into the six figures." OSHA disputed that the audits were
duplicative.
"I would have spent that on more equipment. That would have created more jobs down the line," Johnson told the paper.
Through
a spokesman, The Huffington Post asked Johnson if he still believed
OSHA regulation was too burdensome. He had no immediate response.
According
to OSHA records, Johnson's company was hit with proposed penalties of
$9,638 for exposing workers to apparent hazards in 2011.
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