FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: April 28, 2026
Contact: Chad Cyrowski, CCyrowski@miaflcio.org, 248.867.9508
LANSING, MI – Today, on Workers’ Memorial Day, the Michigan AFL-CIO mourns the loss of workers who have been killed, disabled, sickened, or injured on the job, and calls for all partners in the labor movement to hold the line for safe workplaces. Across the nation, more than 380 workers are killed and more than 8,600 suffer injury and illness because of dangerous working conditions each day.
“Each worker deserves to return home to their families as safe and well as they were when they clocked into work that morning,” said Ron BIEBER, president of the Michigan AFL-CIO. “Unfortunately, the progress made by unions on workplace safety is under attack by Trump and his billionaire buddies — people who don’t know an honest day’s work. Today, Michigan’s labor movement honors those we’ve lost and stands united in our call for safe workplaces for all.”
The state of Michigan recognizes April 28th as Workers Memorial Day, and more than 20 Michigan counties and municipalities from Detroit to Marquette have passed resolutions recognizing Workers Memorial Day — but there is much more to be done. In 2024, the latest year for which data is available, Michigan experienced 152 deaths and more than 76,000 injuries and illnesses – many of them preventable. This has to stop: it’s time to hold the line.
The Michigan AFL-CIO, Michigan’s largest labor organization, is a federation representing forty different labor organizations, eighteen different central labor councils, and eight constituency groups representing over 1 million union members and their families.
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