RI 2117 The Efficiency of Mine Labor with Special Consideration of Industrial Medicine and Health Conservation

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Arthur L. Murray
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
6
File Size:
555 KB
Publication Date:
Apr 1, 1920

Abstract

"During recent months much criticism as to the efficiency of mine labor has been heard from various, sections of the country. No doubt much of this criticism has been well founded. The present lack of efficiency and of stability is due primarily to a spirit of restlessness and partial irresponsibility engendered during the transition from war conditions to peace time conditions. This spirit or unrest not only among the laboring classes but in every branch of the human family following a period of intense nervous tension in a nation appears to be a natural sequence of war and beyond the control of man. This condition will gradually disappear, and the majority of our people will again assume their natural order of living, but labor will for a considerable period be sensitive to these influences, whether they be exerted for good or for evil. Employers of labor should take cognizance of this fact and bend every effort towards the development of measures that promote efficiency and permanence of the working force.Labor efficiency depends upon many and varied factors. Some of these factors as applied to mine labor are briefly enumerated in the following paragraph:Selection and Placement of Manpower:In the selection of men the two main considerations are physical ability and adaptability. The laws of mechanics should be applied in the selection of men as in the selection of machinery. If a machine is required for a certain class of work, the type of machine known to be mechanically fit for such work is selected. Likewise, men should be selected with regard to their physical and temperamental fitness for the kind of work expected of them."
Citation

APA: Arthur L. Murray  (1920)  RI 2117 The Efficiency of Mine Labor with Special Consideration of Industrial Medicine and Health Conservation

MLA: Arthur L. Murray RI 2117 The Efficiency of Mine Labor with Special Consideration of Industrial Medicine and Health Conservation. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1920.

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