Following criticism from its usual allies, the US Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board will reconsider a controversial decision not to include the names of workers killed in industrial accidents in its reports. The decision was challenged by members of the public, unions representing workers, organizations counseling family members, health experts, and others at the board’s June 26 meeting. They spoke of the importance to families of having the names of loved ones killed on the job made public and included in the CSB’s accident reports. Citing a statistic or simply calling the deceased a worker creates numbness, several family counselors said. A name, in contrast, conveys that a person died. Several said no family member had ever objected to the practice. Instead they had thanked the CSB for naming the dead. In a statement, the board said it had previously included names in reports out of respect and in