Industry-Provided Depositions
Action on Smoking and Health, Petitioner, V. U.S. Department of Labor, Respondents. No. 89-1656
Fields
- Type
- DEPO, DEPOSITION/TRIAL TRANSCRIPT
- Area
- SCHULTZ,FRED/BASEMENT GMP (VPRD)
- Alias
- 87208854/87208874
- Site
- G60
- Recipient (Organization)
- US Court Appeals Dc
- Recipient
- Ginsburg, D.H.
- Ginsburg, R.B.
- Silberman
- Ginsburg, R.B.
- Date Loaded
- 12 Feb 1999
- Named Person
- Silberman
- Surgeon General
- Wells, J.
- Banzhaf, J.
- James, C.F.
- Mcmillan, A.C.
- Mueller, Art
- Repace
- Surgeon General
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 87208853/8878
- Named Organization
- Ash, Action on Smoking & Health
- Congress
- Dept of Labor
- Epa, Environmental Protection Agency
- FDA, Food and Drug Administration
- Medical Public Health Assn
- Meridian
- Office of Technology Assessment
- Office of the Solicitor
- OSHA, Occupational Safety & Health Administration
- Perrier
- Public Citizens Research Group
- Science Advisory Comm
- Congress
Document Images
TRANSCRIPT OF PROCEEDINGS
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
ACTION ON SMOKING AND HEALTH,
Petitioner,
--vs--
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR,
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH
ADMINISTRATION, et al.,
Resspondents.
No. 89-1656
Pages 1 thru 20 Washington, D.C.
May 6, 1991
MILLER REPORTING COMPANY, INC.
507 C Street. N.E.
Washington, D.C. 20002
546-6666

1
T504
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
ACTION ON SMOKING AND HEALTH,
Petitioner, .
V.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, .
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH .
ADMINISTRATION, et al., .
No. 89-1656
Respondents. .
Monday, May 6, 1991
Washington, D.C.
The above-entitled matter came on for oral argument,
pursuant to notice, at 9:30 a.m.
BEFORE: j
CIRCUIT JUDGES RUTH B. GINSBURG, SILBERMAN and j
~
D.H. GINSBURG
~
APPEARANCES: ~
~
ATHENA R. TAYLOR-CARROLL de MUELLER, ESQ., ~
2013 H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006;
on behalf of Petitioner
CHARLES F. JAMES, ESQ., Office of the Solicitor,
U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20210; on behalf
of the Respondents
MRLER REPORTING CO., INC.
507 C Street. N.E.
Washington. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666

2
Jt i
C O N T E N T S
ORAL ARGUMENT OF: PAGE
Athena R. Taylor-Carroll de Mueller, Esq.,
on behalf of Petitioner
3j
I
Charles F. James, Esq.,
on behalf of Respondents 11 1
~
~
Athena R. Taylor-Carroll de Mueller, Esq.,
on behalf of Petitioner -- Rebuttal
19 I
MILLER REPORTING CO.. INC.
507 C Street. N.E.
Washington. D.C. 20002
(202) 5466666

jt
1
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MILLER REPORTINQ CO., INC.
507 C Scceet. N.E.
Wuhiagcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666
3
P R 0 C E E D I N G S
THE CLERK: No. 89-1656, Action on Smoking and ~
Health, Petitioner v. The Occupational Safety and Health ~
Administration, Department of Labor, Secretary of Labor, and I
the Honorable Alan C. McMillan, Acting Assistant Secretary ofi
I
Labor for Occupational Safety and Health.
~
Athena R. Taylor-Carroll de Mueller, Esq., for ~
I
petitioner; and Charles F. James, Esq., for respondents.
i
THE COURT: Ms. Mueller, please proceed. I
ORAL ARGUMENT OF ATHENA R. TAYLOR-CARROLL de MUELLER, ESQ., I
i
ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER
MS. MUELLER: May it please the Court: My name is ;
~
Athena Mueller. I am representing Action on Smoking and i
~
Health, and today I am deputizing for John Banzhaf, who has I
often appearing before this Court before on mattes relating
to smoking and health.
This is a petition for review of a determination of
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, in
response to a ASH citizen petition asking for an emergency
temporary standard to regulate tobacco smoke in the workplace.
Alternatively, we would like to have had any other remedy
which would alleviated this rather serious condition.
i

jt
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MIILER-REPONTiNO CO., INC.
507 C Srreer, N.E.
Washingron. D.C. 20002
(202) 5466666
4
The petition was also filed initialled on the 6th of,
i
May by the Public Citizens Research Group and also by the
Medical Public Health Association, also requesting an
emergency temporary standard, and there the agency also
refused their petition, but they are not proceeding in this
matter. ~
~
Basically, the core of ASH's case is that the ~
agency has not proceeded on the basis of substantial evidencei
in the record considered as a whole. Your Honors, I am not I
proposing to reiterate arguments in the briefs, but there arei
three points I would particularly like to bring your attentioni
. i
to.
~
Basically, the ASH case rests on the OSHA statute,
section 655(c), regulating with regard to an emergency
temporary standard, and there are three elements there:
i
First, the agency must determine that there is a
i
toxic substance present in the workplace; secondly, it must be
considered whether this is, in fact, a danger to employees;
and, thirdly, it must be decided whether a standard is going
to be necessary to remedy this position.
With your permission, I-would like to consider
these points, briefly:

jt
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
M0.lER REPORTING CO.. INC.
507 C Screec. N.E.
Washingcon, D.C. 20002
(202) 5466666
5
First, the question of toxic substance, the record
2~ is replete with examples of research which has considered
3~ --his question, and which has found this very complex subject
to contain many, many different types of toxins. There are ~
i
3,000 compounds in tobacco smoke alone, and some of these, ~
~
such as benzine, carbon monoxide, ethylene oxide, are all ;
I
toxic in their own right, but when you have them mixed j
together, they become an extremely deadly cocktail, if one
can say that, which people in the workplace are having to i
imbibe constantly. j
When they were asked whether this_is a question forj
regulation by any government agency -- and I have to perhaps
remind Your Honors that there are two recent cases in which
I
general public knowledge, the Perrier case and the Chilean
grape case, in which the Federal Food and Drug Administrationi
decided to compound cargoes of grapes and prevent the sale of ~
I
h l
d
h
i
very muc
ess
very,
conta
ne
Perrier, when they eac
carcinogenic material than is present --
QUESTION: Ms. Mueller, on that point, we are
attempting to determine whether it was the will of Congress
in a situation like this, an emergency temporary standard be
put in place, to put this on the fastest track of anything
f.~
. ~

jt
1
2
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MILLER REPORTING CO.. INC.
507 C Srreer. N.E.
Wuhingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 5466666
6
before OSHA, and in that regard, isn't it appropriate to takei
into account the Federal policy acquiesced by Congress every i
year to continue to support the production of tobacco? i
MS. MUELLER: That is true, Your Honor, but on
political questions, of course, which one has to consider of
Congress, the people who are espousing this naturally have to
consider the will of their constituents, so I think this is a
1°ery much a political question, rather than a health question.i
QUESTION: But if we are supposed to be attempting
to divine the will of Congress, we have no mandate to right
all wrongs, and if Congress has not elected to provide the
remedy, then is it'appropriate for us to step in? We have
two statutes, the one under which you are proceeding, and
then there is this other action going on, and my question to
you is, is it appropriate for us to take into account that
every year there is an affirmative vote in Congress to
continue the support of the production of tobacco?
MS. MUELLER: That is so, Your Honor, but I would
respectfully suggest the votes of Congress are very often
based on information which is far older than that which comes
before the Court and that which certainly comes before the
scientific advisors of the Federal agencies who are specific-

jt
31
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
7
111 ally charged with safeguarding public health.
iI
211 QUESTION: Proceed with your argument.
MS. MULLER: Thank you.
~
The second point is whether any employees are I
I
exposed to tobacco smoke and are suffering in grave danger inl
i
the workplace. Here the record provides a variety of figures,i
but I would submit that these are generally ranges. The
Repace range is that 5,000 people per year die as a result of
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke. I think one of the
other public health associations puts it at 3,000. The
Office of Technology Assessment of the U.S. Congress puts it
at between 9,000 and 11,000.
Now, I may stress that this is just deaths from
lung cancer. In addition to that, other evidence which has
been put in the record, one paper which has been annexed to
Ash's petition, the Judson Wells petition, puts an overall
figure of 57,000 people dying per year, 32,000 of these of
heart disease.
Now, if we look in perspective of other regulatory
processes, for example, the EPA, 72 people per year die,
according to the Repace evidence in the record, from other
environmental causes, that is exposure to contaminants in the
M/LLER REPORTING CO.. INC.
507 C Street. N.E.
Washingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666

jt
31
1
41
~
5i
6,
71
I
8
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
2.1
22
MILLER REPORTINO CO., INC.
507 C Screet. N.E.
Washington. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666
8
outside air space. So, I think when we see the contrast
between this and the amount of exposure in the indoor air i
i
space, we have to think very carefully. Even in respondents'I
own study that has been sponsored by them, the Meridian I
study, they say that the evidence of breathed in is such thatj
we cannot easily disregard it. ~
The third point which I would like to make is in
relation to whether a standard can remedy a situation, and
Ash, of course, very strongly recommends that it can. We
are, Your Honors, I would like to submit here, in a case of
first impression. All the other.cases which have come before
you, the cases regarding ethyl alcohol, the cases regarding i
. I
benzine, all involved very important industries, arid the
chemical in every case was part of that industrial process.
So, the agency had not only to consider the actual poison
element, but also the question of the economic aspects of the
industry and the general economy of the United States, the
jobs of thousands of people.
Here we are dealing with a substance that has
absolutely no industrial purpose. In fact, it interferes
with productivity, it causes illness, it fouls the workplace,
aD
it raises insurance raises. So, if, in fact, the agency N
O
OD
r
~
rJ
r

t
J
21
41
I
51
6
71
1
81
i
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MILLER REPORTING CO., INC.
507 C Sveer. N.E.
Wuhingcon. D.C. :0002
(202) 546-6666
1I',I decides to issue an emergency temporary standard in this
9
case, it will not be damaging the industry or the economic
situation, in any case. It will, in fact, be assisting it
considerably.
Finally, I would like to say, in concluding, that
the original petition was filed in 1987, and it is now 4
years later. We are still having people who are dying as a
result of exposure. I will not mention, at least I will not
rely, because the respondents did not have it before them at
the time they made the decision, the recent studies by the
Environmental Protection Agency, but if the Court wishes, I
would be very happy to submit a supplementary memorandum on
the latest findings by the Science Advisory Committee of the
EPA.
QUESTION: It is the case that this Court has never
required an agency to issue any G, is that --
MS. MUELLER: That is so, yes. And Ash, Your
Honor, would be very content for Your Honors to consider the
matter and make such recommendations as you consider appro-
priate in the circumstance, if necessary, properly leading to
a regular notice and comment rulemaking, we would be very
OD
~
happy with that situation. O
aD
~
T
C.7

jt
6
1
7
81
10
11
12
13
141
I
151
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MILLEA REPORTING CO., INC.
507 C Suce[. N E.
Wuhingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 54G-GGGG
10
QUESTION: The agency is proceeding with some kind
of inquiry. They have issued a request for information.
MS. MUELLER: Yes, Your Honor is right, they have
issued a request for information, which, as you are aware, is
the lowest possible ranking of a rulemaking or regulatory
proceeding. They have not even decided in recent correspon-
dence whether this will even include environmental tobacco
smoke. But if it does involve environmental tobacco smoke,
it will be considered in the contents of all indoor air
contaminants, which, of course, can leave them plenty of room
to spend how many years considering c-arpet shops, Chanel No.
5 in the Office of Environment, and we don't know what.
THE COURT: Are there questions? Judge Silberman?
QUESTION: Yes.
Counsel, you do not address the scope of review at
all.
MS. MUELLER: Scope of review?
QUESTION: Our scope of review.
MS. MUELLER: Well, under the review section of
section 555, the Court, of course, is empowered to consider
the question of anyone aggrieved by any standards, and I
think it is general authority that where there is a power to
i

11
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MILLfiR REPORTINO CO.. INC.
507 C Saeet. N.E.
Washington. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666
consider a question where there has been an aggrieving from
the exercise of a power, there is also jurisdiction to
consider failure to exercise power.
Indeed, Ash has, I believe, in some of the later
considerations, submitted that the hazard in this case being
a failure to exercise agency action which it should have been
i
exercised, and that there has, in fact, been an unjustifiablej
delay, so we would plead that Your Honors do have power underj
the question of agency action unlawfully withheld and '
reasonably delayed, even if you might not even have it under ~
~
I
the emergency temporary standard legislation, which we submit ~
~
you have. ~
I
THE COURT: Do you have further questions, Judge
Silberman?
QUESTION: No, I do not.
MS. MUELLER: Thank you.
THE COURT: We will hear from Mr. James.
ORAL ARGUMENT OF CHARLES P. JAMES, ESQ.,
ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENTS
MR. JAMES: I am Charles James, for the Secretary
of Labor.
In this case, OSHA concluded that the evidence was

t
J
12
i
i
I
not sufficiently definitive on the level of risk which exists i
i
in the workplace to justify an emergency standard. OSHA's i
i
3 assessment of the record was reasonable and warrants affir- j
4 mance of its decision. i
5 Because of the emergency and temporary nature of
i
6 this standard, OSHA must make its assessments of grave dangerl
I
7 in assessing under actual prevailing workplace exposure
8 conditions. The evidence submitted by Ash in its petition
9 demonstrates that ambient tobacco smoke is causally related
i
10 to cancer and other disease, but that evidence does not
.11 provide an appropriate basis for determining the level
12 risk which exists.
13 The principal risk assessments in this area are not
14 definitive, because they rely heavily upon data developed in
15 residential studies, rather than on actual occupational
16 exposures. OSHA has noted that the conditions affecting
17 occupational exposure vary widely, depending upon building
18 size and type, ventilatory exchange rates, occupational
19 density and other factors, and --
20 QUESTION: Mr. James, what about the point that, on
21 the other side of the balance, there is really noting to
22 balance, because, as distinguished from other cases, there is
MILLER REPORTING CO., INC.
507 C 5aeec. N.E.
Wuhingcon, D.C. 20002
(202) 5466666

jt
1
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
191
191
20
21
22
13
i
i
no expense, no high cost to industry involved, if smoking were
I
I
31 its brief, all that would be necessary is putting up a"no
,
411 I smoking" sign? So, if you have no cost on one side, shouldn'~
5) it be less required on the other side?
I
6 MR. JAMES: Your Honor, the agency must still make '
i
71 its findings of grave danger, in order to justify any standard
i
8i~ in this area, and OSHA has concluded that the data in this
911 case do not warrant a finding that an emergency exists and ~
2;'I to be banned from the workplace, that is, as Ash put it in
I
that an emergency standard is appropriate. OSHA is consider-i
i
ing various control strategies, including possibly a ban on
smoking in the workplace, but it is doing that in connection i
with its ongoing analysis of regulation of other indoor air i
contaminants, as well.
I
QUESTION: Can you explain why OSHA decided to
proceed through this request for information, rather than
proceed immediately to the initiation of rulemaking?
MR. JAMES: OSHA believes that it may be appropriat~
to regulate ambient tobacco smoke together with other indoor
air contaminants, including radon, including the biological
agents which are implicated in Legionnaires disease, and
other factors. We are not looking at every possible indoor
MILLER REPORTING CO., INC.
507 C Scmec. N.E.
Washington. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666

jt
2
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
12
'13
14
151
161
17
18
19
20
21
22
MIILER REPORTING CO.. INC.
507 C Scceet. N.E.
Wuhingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666
14
air contaminant that can be imagined.
We are focusing on a few that may well present
significant risks, as well, and it is appropriate, in OSHA's
view, if possible to combine a regulatory activity, to
include a number of different substances, rather than just
one, that it is sufficient or more appropriate to do that,
and that is why we have determined to issue the RFI in this
case.
QUESTION: Mr. James, what makes a danger grave?
MR. JAMES: Well, I think the determination of a
grave danger has to be based on a statistical level of risk
which exists, I think the first efforts to determine what
that risk is, and then to determine, based on policy consider~
ations, essentially, whether OSHA believes that constitutes a~
grave danger.
QUESTION: Well, when it gets to that second step,
what considerations determine whether it is grave?
MR. JAMES: Well, I think the level of risk
certainly appears -- if it approaches the benchmark figure of
significance that OSHA uses in conventional notice and
comment rulemaking, that is one aspect to consider.
QUESTION: Please keep your voice up. It is O
GD
gD
04

jt I I 15
1; difficult to hear you, Mr. James.
2 QUESTION: Can there be any room for doubt on the
3 _~-ecord here that some non-trivial number of people are
4 adversely affected or fatally affected by secondary smoke in
5 the work
lac
?
p
e
6 MR. JAMES: Well, I think it is reasonable to
7 assume that there are effects in the workplace to exposure to
8 ambient tobacco smoke, but this is an emergency measure and
9 OSHA requires a higher degree of definition in the level of
10 and I don't think the data demonstrate
risk which exists
,
I
11 that
t
ll h
a
a
ere.
~
12
QUESTION: Has the agency ever I
issued an emergency
13 tem
orar
standa
d?
p
y
r
14 MR. JAMES: The agency has atte mpted to issue one.
15 It has never successfully issued one. It has never had it
16
sustained I
~
.
17 QUESTION: Was that because of judicial review?
18 MR. JAMES: Yes, at least three I believe have been
19 d
overturne
on judici al review.
20 QUESTION: So, three times you have issued a
21 standard and had it overturned on review?
. OD
22
MR.
JAMES:
Yes. ~
N
O
~
,-~
MIILER REPORTINa CO., INC. T
CD
507 C Sueet. N.E.
Washingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666

jt
1
4
5
i
61
1
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MIILER REPORTING CO.. INC.
507 C Street. N.E.
Wuhingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666
16
QUESTION: And have you ever been required to or
reviewed an issue of a standard that the agency had declined
to issue?
MR. JAMES: No, I don't believe that has ever
happened.
Again, I would point out that the evidence of
reference by Ash in its reply brief, while it does demonstrat~
that ambient tobacco smoke can be a cause of disease, does
not purport to estimate or quantify the magnitude of risk in ~
the workplace. I think the Surgeon General's report, on whicH
Ash places heavy reliance, is typical of this group of
studies,in that it expressly recognizes that the degree of
risk due to exposure to ambient tobacco smoke is uncertain,
and that additional and more accurate estimates to exposures
in the workplace, in the home and in public places is
necessary in this arena.
That is all I have. I would be happy to take
questions. If there are none, we would ask that the Secre-
tary's determination be sustained.
QUESTION: You are not challenging the authority of
this Court to review the decision not to issue an ETS?
MR. JAMES: That's correct.

17
21
i QUESTION: Let me ask you the question Judge
Silberman asked of Ms. Mueller. What is the standard of
review? You concede that the refusal to issue an ETS is
4 reviewable under what standard?
5 MR. JAMES: I believe the determination not to
6 issue an ETS is reviewable under the reasonableness standard
7 or an arbitrary and capricious abuse of discretion standard.
8 I believe the Court has adopted that standa rd of review in
9 two prior cases in which it has affirmed OS HA's refusal to
10 issue an ETS in the ethylene oxide and the cadmium cases,
11 which are cited in our brief. In both of those case, the
12 Court applied a reasonableness standard.
13 QUESTION: How, if at all, does OSHA deal wit h the
14 fact that this particular substance is not banned, and some
15 others are, but indeed continues to be supported b y the
16 covernment? Does that enter into the calculus at all?
17 MR. JAMES: I don't think it has entered into the
18 calculus thus far. It certainly hasn't, in terms of grave
19 danger under the emergency temporary standard. OSHA is N
O
20 considering regulating this substance in conjunction with ~
11
21 others, and if it is appropriate to do that, then issue will ~A
22 issue a standard in that area which may provide for a ban, or
MILLER REPORTING CO.. INC.
S07 C Srmer. N.E.
Washingcon. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666

jt
31
1
41
5
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
18
it may provide for regulating it on the basis of a permissible
2111 exposure limit,lor perhaps on some ventilatory exchange rate
standard, something that requires a certain number of air
changes over a given time or something of that nature.
QUESTION: Is there any time line for this request
for information? How long does that go on?
MR. JAMES: Well, we expect to issue this RFI in, i
believe it is early June. It will have a comment period of
120 days.
QUESTION: If this is issued in early June, then
what would be the next step?
MR. JAMES: The next step would be to provide a
period for solicitation of comments, and then, after the
comments are received, to consider those and make a determin-
ation of how to proceed in this area.
QUESTION: At what point would there be a decision
of whether to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking?
MR. JAMES: Do you mean at what point in time,
timewise?
QUESTION: Yes.
21
22
MILLER REPORTINO CO., INC.
507 C Srrcn. N.E
Washington. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666
MR. JAMES: I'm not sure. It depends on the scope
of the responses to the RFI.

jt
1
2
3
4
51
i
61
1
7
19
THE COURT: Are there further questions of Mr.
James?
[No response.]
If the Court has no further questions, thank you, ;
I
I
Mr. James.
Ms. Mueller, you have some time remaining.
I
ORAL ARGUMENT OF ATHENA R. TAYLOR-CARROLL DE MUELLER, ESQ.,
8 ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER -- REBUTTAL i
~
9 MS. MUELLER: M ay it please the Court: I wou ld ~i
10
like t
o refer to one
small point that came from Mr. Jam i
es'
11 remarks, and that was the question of differing effect, as to'
12 whether there is a contact with a poisonous substance at workl
13 or at home, which seems rather unusual.
141 However, in some of the research materials wh ich I
~
15 are in the record, the Office of Technology Assessment of the I
16 U.S. Congress found that at least one-third of the deat hs
17 caused by exposure to environmental tobacco smoke was a I
18 result of workplace exposure.
h fil
d
k
hi
i
f
19 or emergency
now, As
t
As you
e
s pet
tion
20 relief , because we felt t hat the situation justified it. We
21 know that the respondents are well-meaning and conscientious
22
public servants, but they operate in quite a different a
~
~
MILLER REPORTINQ CO., INC.
W
507 C Srreec. N.E.
Wuhingron. D.C. 20002
(202) 546-6666

jt
I
~
21
4
6
7
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
MILLER REPORTING CO., INC.
507 C Street. N.E.
Wuhing[oa. D.C. 20002
(202) 5466666
20
context from Ash. They are very much more isolated from the
public feeling, and they don't have the people who come to
them who come to Ash, the young parents, the families
who
have just been told that they have cancer of the lung or
beautiful young women, flight attendants who have emphysema,
the smokers' disease, who have never smoked in their lives.
So, I think this is the thing that gives probably Ash a
feeling that this is a matter that needs a more urgent
approach than would otherwise be necessary.
The other, in relation to the position of Congress
and the function of the Department of Labor, the Department
of Labor is appointed by Congress to carry out the will of
Congress to protect the United States workforce and to insure
that every American man and woman should, to the extent
possible, have a safe and healthful working environment, and
we feel that the respondents need your encouragement to carry
out this very important public duty imposed by the Congress.
Thank you very much.
THE COURT: Thank you, Ms. Mueller. The case is
submitted.
[Whereupon, at 10:00 a.m., the case in the above-
entitled matter was submitted.]
