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AIHA Launches Campaign to Restore NIOSH

AIHA, the association for scientists and professionals committed to preserving and ensuring occupational and environmental health and safety, is taking action to restore staff and funding to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) in the face of devastating federal cuts. Created by the 1970 Occupational Safety and Health Act, NIOSH is the agency within the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that is responsible for conducting research and making recommendations to prevent work-related illnesses and injuries. Reductions to NIOSH personnel planned by the Trump administration will leave “only a fraction of its original workforce to manage select programs,” said AIHA CEO Lawrence Sloan. “The proposed reductions effectively end the institute's ability to conduct essential research and provide guidance.”

The scope of the cuts is “unprecedented, affecting not just the staff and programmatic activities of NIOSH, but also the entire OEHS profession,” according to one industrial hygienist remaining at NIOSH, who did not have permission to speak on the record and therefore asked to remain anonymous. “The scientific resources, expertise, and funding that NIOSH provides cannot be recreated elsewhere.”

AIHA’s campaign to restore NIOSH encourages professionals in OEHS and allied fields to contact their elected representatives about the importance of maintaining NIOSH staffing and programs. The campaign has already generated more than 3,700 messages to legislators. Individuals wishing to take action can message their representatives directly through the association’s grassroots portal, which provides a prefilled letter. A PDF with information about the importance of NIOSH is also available to help advocates customize messages.

“Contact your representatives and urge them to support NIOSH’s critical mission,” AIHA urged via LinkedIn.

AIHA is also engaging with legislators and policymakers to advocate for the preservation of NIOSH and partnering with allied associations, including the American Society of Safety Professionals, the National Safety Council, and other members of the Intersociety Forum, a coalition of more than 20 OEHS associations, to present a unified response against the proposed cuts. In a letter dated April 4, more than 100 members of Congress joined multiple unions and AIHA in calling on President Donald J. Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, to reverse the terminations at NIOSH. If the terminations stand, the letter states, “millions of workers across the country will face greater risks to job injury, illness, and death.”

Many stakeholders consider NIOSH the world’s leading workplace health and safety agency, and the proposed cuts will affect programs ranging from mining safety research to the certification of personal protective equipment. The agency’s programs include the World Trade Center Health Program, which provides monitoring and treatment for first responders and survivors of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. World Trade Center Health Program staff are among the fewer than 150 NIOSH employees expected to remain after the cuts are enacted, representing a handful of the approximately 1,400 full- and part-time staff who worked at the agency as of late March 2025. However, advocates say the cuts “will cripple the program’s ability to adequately monitor and provide care,” as reported by USA Today.

Other critical NIOSH programs have been eliminated, such as the National Firefighter Registry for Cancer, which was created when Congress passed the Firefighter Cancer Registry Act of 2018. NIOSH describes the NFR as “the largest effort ever undertaken to understand and reduce risk of cancer among U.S. firefighters.” The registration section of the NFR website became unavailable following reduction-in-force notices to agency staff.

Sloan stressed that these cuts to NIOSH will send ripple effects through the OEHS field and suppliers due to loss of research and guidance. “The elimination of programs dedicated to mining safety and PPE certification raises significant concerns about the future effectiveness of safety protocols and the availability of reliable protective equipment for workers,” Sloan said.

“For those who don’t think the cost of NIOSH’s $363 million annual budget is worth the investment in preventing workplace illnesses and injuries, this study estimated just three NIOSH case studies (with a cost of $5.1 million) has resulted in an annual economic value of $338 million to over $1.2 billion,” said AIHA President, Nicole Greeson. “NIOSH provides a significant return on investment.”

About AIHA

AIHA is the association for scientists and professionals committed to preserving and ensuring occupational and environmental health and safety in the workplace and community. Founded in 1939, we support our members with our expertise, networks, comprehensive education programs, and other products and services that help them maintain the highest professional and competency standards. AIHA serves as a resource for those employed across the public and private sectors, as well as to the communities in which they work.

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