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Workers Who Died On The Job Remembered

Gurnal Scott

Friends of workers who died on the job honored their memory in Raleigh.   An observance of what they're calling Workers' Memorial Day included people reciting the names of employees killed on the job in North Carolina. 

The non-profit National Council on Occupational Safety and Healthsays a majority of the workers died of hazards related to their jobs: falls, fires and transportation mishaps.  Executive Director Tom O'Connor says too often employers cut corners, and the state Labor Department didn't call them on it.

"Sometimes those employers are able to get away with that," O'Connor says.  "And we believe if there were more severe penalties for those bad actors, that would act as a more effective deterrent."

A spokeswoman for state Labor Commissioner Cherie Berry says North Carolina has made great strides in eliminating workplace deaths.  She says the state now averages 3.1 deaths per 100 workers -- an all-time low -- but zero deaths is the goal.

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Gurnal Scott joined North Carolina Public Radio in March 2012 after several stops in radio and television. After graduating from the College of Charleston in his South Carolina hometown, he began his career in radio there. He started as a sports reporter at News/Talk Radio WTMA and won five Sportscaster of the Year awards. In 1997, Gurnal moved on to television as general assignment reporter and weekend anchor for WCSC-TV in Charleston. He anchored the market's top-rated weekend newscasts until leaving Charleston for Memphis, TN in 2002. Gurnal worked at WPTY-TV for two years before returning to his roots in radio. He joined the staff of Memphis' NewsRadio 600 WREC in 2004 eventually rising to News Director. In 2006, Raleigh news radio station WPTF came calling and he became the station's chief correspondent. Gurnal’s reporting has been honored by the South Carolina Broadcasters Association, the North Carolina Associated Press, and the Radio Television Digital News Association of the Carolinas.
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