By K. Aleisha Fetters
WeNews correspondent
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
(WOMENSENEWS)--When Elizabeth Fox, 44, was completing her electrician apprenticeship, male coworkers hid their work from her so she couldn't see what they were doing. That made it difficult to learn how to use the trade's tools, especially since they didn't fit her hands.
Twenty-four years later, she has punctured cartilage in her shoulder, a crushed ulna nerve canal in her elbow, tendinosis in her forearm, atrophy in her arm, meniscus damages and has had two knee surgeries.
"I want to make sure that women in the business don't make the same mistakes I did," Fox said. "Women need to work smarter, not harder."
Professional grade work tools are made to fit men's hands. Even those advertised as being ergonomically safe are only so for the average man's hands and body.
"Tools just don't fit women's bodies," said Mary Watters, director of communication for the Center for Construction Research and Training, a construction industry research, training and service nonprofit based in Silver Spring, Md. "Even their gloves don't fit. It raises the risk that tools can slip, and to compensate for tools and gloves not fitting, women have to apply more pressure than do men. Repeating motions day in and day out can cause severe injury."
Fox has done research, while studying at The National Labor College in Maryland, with chiropractors, physical therapists and orthopedic surgeons on the dangers of working with ill-fitting hand tools. She says tools that don't fit properly can trigger pressure points, damage blood vessels and lead to injury.
Low Numbers Raise Risks
In 1970, 1.2 percent of construction trade employees were women. In 2000, they made up 2 percent of construction trades.
Françoise Jacobsohn is project manager of the Equality Works program at Legal Momentum, the country's oldest legal defense and education fund for women, with headquarters in New York City.
She said women's low numbers raise their on-the-job risks.
Jacobsohn said better working conditions for tradeswomen depend on increasing the number of women in apprenticeship programs until women reach the critical mass needed to make wide-reaching changes in the sector.
"Most women don't want to litigate," said Jacobsohn. "Women are willing to put up with a great deal of injustice to keep working. They know if they press issues, they will be shoved off of sites. There are real repercussions to speaking out in the trades."
Francine A. Moccio, author of the 2009 book "Live Wire: Women and Brotherhood in the Electrical Industry" agrees that there are repercussions, even without speaking out.
"There's a lot of hazing that goes on in the trades. I've heard many, many stories . . . of men setting women up to get hurt, letting them get electrocuted, urinating on their toolboxes," she said.
Moccio said worksite conditions are suffering from the economic downturn. "Contractors aren't really paying attention to safety. They're competing for jobs and don't want to go over budget. And during the recession property values have dropped so much while building costs are still high. So they cut corners and costs everywhere they can."
Laura Boatman is project coordinator for the State Building and Construction Trades Council, a statewide labor organization, based in Sacramento, Calif., that held the first national conference for tradeswomen in May. She says women's on-the-job training is hindered by contractors who consistently shy away from hiring them.
"Women are given tasks that they aren't trained to do," Boatman said. "And often will be assigned tasks that
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