Title: Introduction to OSHA and the Act
1Introduction to OSHA and the Act
2The Need for Legislation
- Workplace injuries and illnesses increasing
throughout the 1960s - Need for more comprehensive and uniform
protection of nations workers - Size of national workforce increasing
- Congressional hearings on worker safety were held
3The Need for Legislation
- In 1970, Congress considered these figures
- 14,000 worker deaths
- 2.5 million workers disabled
- 300,000 new occupational disease cases
4Public Law 91-596 Enacted
- Occupational Safety and Health Act signed by
President Nixon on December 29th 1970 - Effective April 29, 1971
5Public Law 91-596
- Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, also
called - OSHA Act
- OSH Act
- 34 sections
- Amended
- 1990
- 1998
- 2001
6Purpose of the Act
- ". . . to assure so far as possible every working
man and woman in the Nation safe and healthful
working conditions and to preserve our human
resources."
7Three Agencies Established
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration
(OSHA) - National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health (NIOSH) - Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
(OSHRC)
8Section 2 - OSHAS Purpose
- Reduce workplace hazards
- Implement new or improve existing safety and
health programs - Provide for research in solving occupational
safety and health problems
9Section 2 - OSHAS Purpose
- Establish employer and employee responsibilities
for safety and health conditions. - Build on employer/employee safety and health
initiatives. - Focus on occupational health to prevent diseases
occurring in the work environment.
10Section 2 - OSHAS Purpose
- Establish training programs to increase the
number and competence of occupational safety and
health personnel - Develop mandatory job safety and health standards
and enforce them effectively - Develop recordkeeping and reporting requirements
11Section 2 - OSHAS Purpose
- Provide for the development, analysis, evaluation
and approval of state occupational safety and
health programs.
12Section 3 - Definitions
- As defined by the Act, an employer is any "person
engaged in a business affecting commerce who has
employees, but does not include the United States
or any State or political subdivision of a
State."
13Section 4 - The Acts Coverage
- Coverage of the Act extends to all 50 states, and
the District of Columbia - Includes all territories under Federal
jurisdiction - Coverage provided either directly by federal OSHA
or through an OSHA-approved state program. - Replaces some previously established federal
laws.
14Section 4 - The Acts Coverage
- Manufacturing
- Construction
- Longshoring
- Agriculture
15Not Covered
- Self-employed persons (incl. homeowners)
- Farms on which only immediate members of the farm
employer's family are employed - Working conditions regulated by other federal
agencies under other federal statutes. - If they have safety and health rules and
execute authority over their rules
16Federal Agency Coverage-Examples
- Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)
- OSHA covers facilities
- FRA covers tracks, trains, etc..
- Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
- OSHA covers to the tarmac
- FAA covers past the tarmac
17Section 5 - Duties
- (a) Each employer -
- (1) shall furnish to each of his employees
employment and a place of employment which are
free from recognized hazards that are likely to
cause death or serious physical harm to his
employees - (2) shall comply with occupational safety and
health standards promulgated under this Act. - 5(a)(1) Known as General Duty Clause
18General Duty Clause
- Applies where OSHA has not passed specific
standards - Employer must protect employees from recognized
hazards likely to cause death or serious harm - Industry and consensus standards
- Common safe practices
- Hazards recognized by similar employers
- Manufacturer requirements or manuals
19Section 5 - Duties
- (b) Each employee shall comply with occupational
safety and health standards and all rules,
regulations, and orders issued pursuant to the
Act which are applicable to his own actions and
conduct.
20Provisions for Federal Employees
- Federal agency heads responsible for providing
safe and healthful working conditions for their
employees. - Act requires agencies to comply with standards
consistent with those OSHA issues.
21Provisions for Federal Employees
- No OSHA penalties levied against another
federal agency for failure to comply with OSHA
standards (Exception U.S. Postal Service
enacted 1998). - Compliance issues at federal agencies are
resolved internally to that agency - Federal agency safety responsibilities are
described in Section 19 of the Act.
22Provisions for State Local Governments
- OSHA provisions do not apply to state and local
governments - States desiring to gain OSHA approval for a
private sector occupational safety and health
program must provide a program that also covers
state and local government workers.
23State Plan States
State Plan States AK, AZ, CA, CT, HI, IN, IA,
KY, MD, MI, MN, NV, NJ, NM, NY, NC, OR, PR, SC,
TN, UT, VT, VI, VA, WA, WY
24Provisions for State Local Governments
- State plans may also cover only public sector
employees (city, municipal, state) - Twenty-three states and territories operate plans
covering both the public and private sectors. - Three states CT, NJ, and NY - operate public
employee only plans.
CT
NY
NJ
25Section 6 - Occupational Safety and Health
Standards
- Secretary of Labor, for first two years after
Acts promulgation, could adopt any established
Federal or consensus standard which would result
in improved employee safety and health - It is the responsibility of the employer to
become familiar with standards that apply to
their establishments
26Section 6 - Occupational Safety and Health
Standards
- (6)(a) OSHA given authority to promulgate
start-up standards without rulemaking - (6)(b) Rulemaking procedure
- (6)(c) Emergency temporary standards
- (6)(d) Variances
27Section 7 - Advisory Committees Administration
- 7(a)(1) Establishes National Advisory Committee
on Occupational Safety and Health - The Committee shall advise, consult with, and
make recommendations to the Secretary - NACOSH meets at least twice per year
28Section 8 - Inspections, Investigations
Recordkeeping
- 8(a) OSHA representatives are authorized to
- (1) enter without delay
- (2) inspect during regular working hours and at
reasonable times and to question privately
employers and employees - 8(b) OSHA has subpoena power
- 8(c) OSHA requires recordkeeping
- 8(f) Employees right of complaint
29Section 9 - Citations
- 9(a) If an employer violates Section 5 of Act or
any standard, rule or order related to Section 6,
a citation may be issued.
Each citation will - Be in writing
- Describe the particular violation
- Set a reasonable abatement period
- 9(b) Posting of citations
- 9(c) Time limit - 6 months to issue citation
30Section 10 - Enforcement
- 10(a) Employers right of contest
- Citations can be contested up to the Occupational
Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC), an
independent quasi-judicial branch of the
Department of Labor - 10(c) Employees right of contest of abatement
dates
31Section 11 - Judicial Review
- 11(a) Appeals review of Commission order
- 11(c) Prohibits discrimination against employees
filing complaints under OSHA, or for disclosing
safety and health issues concerning the workplace
32Section 12 - Occupational Safety Health Review
Commission
- Establishes membership and terms of Review
Commission (OSHRC) - OSHRC acts independently of OSHA
- http//www.oshrc.gov
33Section 13 - Procedures to Counteract Imminent
Dangers
- Allows OSHA to petition for (obtain) a
restraining order in cases of Imminent Danger. - U.S. District Court issues
- Area Director requests through Solicitor of Labor
- OSHA will
- Advise employer of imminent danger
- Advise employees of rights
- Petition District Court for relief
34Section 17 - Penalties
- Penalties were increased in 1990
- Willful repeated violations to a maximum of
70,000 - Minimum 5,000 willful
- Serious other than serious to 7,000
- Failure to abate to a maximum of 7,000 for each
day violation continues (up to 30 day max.)
35Section 18 - State Plans
- States may regulate anything OSHA does not
- State plans must be approved by OSHA to regulate
anything OSHA does - Must be at least as effective as federal
standards
36Section 18 - State Plans
- Approved state plans can receive funding up to
90 of budget - Penalty proceeds collected via state programs
remain in that state
37Section 19 - Federal Agency Programs
Responsibilities
- Federal agencies (exception Post Office) are
required to establish their own safety and health
programs consistent with OSHA. - Require the use of safety equipment PPE as
necessary to protect employees - Keep accident and illness records
- Establish rules consistent with OSHA
- Executive Order 12196 further defines the
responsibilities of Federal Agencies.
38Section 20 - Research and Related Activities
- Most OSHA research is carried out by the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH), under Department of Health and Human
Services (HHS) - Secretary of HHS confers with Secretary of Labor
and conducts research on occupational safety and
health problems
39Section 21 - Training and Employee Education
- Training and education responsibilities are
shared by the Department of Labor (DOL) and HHS - Training is authorized directly or through grants
40Section 22 - National Institute for Occupational
Safety and Health
- Establishes NIOSH as a part of HHS
41Section 24 - Statistics
- DOL is authorized to collect and analyze
statistics of occupational fatalities, injuries,
and illnesses. - Data is collected and compiled by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS).
42Section 27 - NCSWCL
- Establishment of the National Commission on State
Workmans Compensation Laws to ensure adequate
worker protection in the event of disabling
work-related injuries and illnesses
43Historic Progress
- A total of 5,915 fatal work injuries were
recorded in 2000, - A decline of about 58 percent from 1970,
according to the Census of Fatal Occupational
Injuries, conducted by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor.