Nebraska Exposed Trades & Union Halls — Asbestos Exposure History

Nebraska's construction trades and industrial union locals worked alongside asbestos on virtually every major industrial project from the 1930s through the 1980s. Insulators, boilermakers, pipefitters, electricians, ironworkers, and sheet metal workers encountered asbestos-containing materials every day — in new construction, maintenance shutdowns, and demolition. The union hall you worked out of shapes which facilities appear in your work history and which asbestos products you were exposed to. Click any local to read its documented exposure history and jobsite connections.

Union Hall / Local
Trade Jobsite

Map shows 0 Nebraska union locals and 0 documented trade exposure sites. Click any marker to read the exposure history.

Detailed union local exposure histories for Nebraska are being compiled. Check back soon, or browse all Nebraska jobsites.

Which Trades Had the Highest Asbestos Exposure in Nebraska?

Insulators (Heat & Frost)
The highest-risk trade. Insulators applied, removed, and repaired asbestos pipe covering, block insulation, and boiler lagging on virtually every industrial project. Fiber concentrations during pipe stripping regularly exceeded OSHA PELs by 10–100×.
Highest RiskHFIA
Boilermakers
Boilermakers built, repaired, and overhauled power plant boilers, industrial furnaces, and pressure vessels — all insulated with asbestos block and cement. Annual shutdown work at power plants created recurring high-exposure events throughout a boilermaker's career.
High RiskIBB
Pipefitters & Steamfitters
Pipefitters installed and maintained steam, process, and utility piping throughout industrial facilities. Working alongside insulators on every project, they disturbed asbestos pipe covering daily and were exposed to airborne fibers from neighboring trades' work throughout their careers.
High RiskUA
Electricians (IBEW)
Electricians worked in environments saturated with asbestos from adjacent trades, ran wiring through asbestos-insulated conduit, and worked alongside insulated electrical equipment at power plants, substations, and industrial facilities. Electrical panels and switchgear also used asbestos arc-suppression components.
High RiskIBEW
Ironworkers
Ironworkers erected structural steel in facilities where asbestos fireproofing was sprayed on structural members during construction. They were directly exposed during application and worked continuously in buildings where sprayed fireproofing remained in place for decades.
High RiskIronworkers
Carpenters
Carpenters worked in buildings throughout the construction and renovation era, disturbing asbestos floor tiles, ceiling tiles, joint compound (drywall mud), and insulated building components. Bystander exposure from other trades was also significant.
Moderate RiskUBC
Sheet Metal Workers
Sheet metal workers fabricated and installed HVAC duct systems lined with asbestos insulation board, and worked in boiler rooms alongside insulators. Cutting, bending, and fitting asbestos-insulated ductwork generated fiber clouds in confined mechanical spaces.
Moderate RiskSMWIA
Steelworkers (USW)
Steelworkers in Nebraska's steel mills and basic metals industry faced asbestos refractory exposure at blast furnaces, coke ovens, and electric arc furnaces, plus asbestos gaskets throughout high-temperature process equipment.
Moderate RiskUSW
Nebraska Filing Deadline for Trade Workers
Nebraska gives asbestos disease victims four years from diagnosis to file under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-224. Union members frequently work at dozens of jobsites across their careers — your full work history matters. Contact a Nebraska asbestos attorney to document every facility before the deadline.
NEW FEATURE
WorkChain
Research Assistant

Build a documented exposure history across every facility you worked at. Add your email when you're done and we'll send you a PDF copy you can keep, share, or print.

Open WorkChain ›