More than 150 House Democrats, led by Reps. Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey, Mark Pocan of Wisconsin, and Salud Carbajal of California, urged congressional leadership in a letter on Monday to include worker safety provisions protecting front-line federal workers in the upcoming coronavirus response legislation. In the letter, which was addressed to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, progressive and moderate Democrats call for an emergency temporary standard from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, to protect essential federal workers who face elevated risk of exposure to Covid-19 with provisions that include increased hazard pay, parity in union bargaining, and expanded telework.

OSHA, an agency of the Labor Department, recently put out guidelines detailing steps workplaces can take in response to the pandemic — but the agency’s recommendations aren’t mandatory or being enforced. An emergency temporary standard, Democratic lawmakers say, would make the worker protections enforceable. For the last several rounds of negotiations over coronavirus relief, Democrats have advocated for expanding these protections to at-risk workers, including health care providers and support personnel at the Department of Veterans Affairs, employees at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and TSA agents. But Republicans continue to oppose it. “Further, as federal workers continue to ensure that critical operations continue during this pandemic, many have already contracted COVID-19, some have died, and thousands more remain at risk for infection,” the letter reads. “This is why it is critical that any new legislation to respond to this pandemic include provisions to protect and support federal workers.” In an interview with The Intercept, Watson Coleman noted that there are thousands of federal employees not covered under Title 5 of the U.S. Code, including Transportation Security Administration officers and certain Federal Aviation Administration employees, who don’t receive many of the basic workplace rights given to the majority of the federal workforce. “There’s a stubbornness about this group of individuals who are on the front lines every day,” Watson Coleman said. The New Jersey lawmaker added that these employees “tend to be the lower paid ones” and experience high turnover in their departments. “If they’re not protected, if we can’t ensure that they’re not affected by the virus — that they’re not contagious or exposed. Think of how that translates into exposing the thousands of people that will be going through the airports,” she continued.