Title: Introduction to OSHA
1Introduction to OSHA
YouthBuild Kick-off Conference January 30, 2008
2The Important Stuff
- Schedule
- Restrooms
- Emergency exits and mustering point
- Cell phones
3What is OSHA?
- Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- Responsible for worker safety and health
protection
4Is there a need for OSHA?
Each year...
- Nearly 6,000 workplace fatalities
- 50,000 deaths from workplace-related illnesses
- 5.7 million non-fatal workplace injuries
- Injuries alone cost U.S. businesses over 125
billion
Source - OSHA Publication 2056
5Has OSHA Made a Difference?
YES!
Since 1970 OSHA has
- Helped cut the work-related fatality rate in half
- Worked with employers and employees to reduce
workplace injuries and illnesses by 40 - Virtually eliminated brown lung disease in the
textile industry, and - Reduced trenching and excavation fatalities by 35
6What does OSHA do?
- Encourages employers and employees to reduce
workplace hazards and implement new or improve
existing safety and health programs - Develops and enforces mandatory job safety and
health standards - Maintains a reporting and recordkeeping system to
monitor job-related injuries and illnesses - Provides assistance, training and other support
programs to help employers and workers
7Who is covered by the OSH Act?
- Most private sector employees
- Coverage is provided directly by federal OSHA or
through an OSHA-approved state program - Does not cover the self-employed or immediate
members of farm families that do not employ
outside workers
8 OSHA Standards
- OSHA develops and enforces standards that
employers must follow. - Where OSHA does not have standards, employers
are responsible for following the OSH Act's
General Duty Clause. - States with OSHA-approved programs must set
standards at least as effective as federal
standards.
9What does OSHA Require?
- Determine which standards apply to your workplace
- Follow the OSHA standards and requirements
10What are workers responsibilities?
- Read the OSHA poster
- Follow the employers safety and health rules and
wear or use all required gear and equipment - Follow safe work practices for your job, as
directed by your employer - Report hazardous conditions to a supervisor or
safety committee - Report hazardous conditions to OSHA, if employers
do not fix them - Cooperate with OSHA inspectors
(see OSHA Workers' web page for more information)
11What are workers rights?
- Identify and correct problems in their
workplaces, working with their employers whenever
possible - Complain to OSHA about workplace conditions
threatening their health or safety in person, by
telephone, by fax, by mail or electronically
through OSHAs web site - Section 11(c) of the OSH Act gives workers the
right to seek safe and healthful conditions on
the job without being disciplined or fired
(see OSHA Workers' web page for more information)
12OSHA Workers' Page
www.osha.gov/as/opa/worker/index.html
13What are employers rights responsibilities?
- Employers must provide a safe and healthful
workplace free of recognized hazards and follow
the OSHA standards - The OSH Act grants employers important rights,
particularly during and after an OSHA inspection - Employers must provide training, medical
examinations and recordkeeping
14Competent Person in Construction
- A person who
- Knows the right standard,
- Can identify hazards in the operation, and
- Is designated by the employer, and has the
authority to take appropriate actions. - "Competent Person" is found in many standards.
- Some standards set specific requirements for
the "competent person."
15Workplace Inspections
- Establishments covered by the OSH Act are
subject to inspection by OSHA compliance safety
and health officers (CSHO's) - Most inspections are conducted without advance
notice
16What Types of Hazards are Addressed in Standards?
- Electrical
- Cranes
- Falls
- Excavation
- Scaffolding
- Machines
- Stairways Ladders
- Chemical
17The OSH Act of 1970
- Section 5(b) - Follow the written rules.
- Section 5(a)(1) - General Duty Clause.
- Fix what you can know is broken.
- Each employer shall furnish a place of employment
which is free of serious, recognizable hazards to
the health and safety of their employees.
18Inspection Types I
- Programmed Inspections (industry problem)
- Random selection by computer report
- Special emphasis programs based on kinds of
hazards in a line of work - Comprehensive with chance of Focus
19Inspection Types II
- Unprogrammed inspections (site problem)
- Accidents fatalities or catastrophes (3 or more
people admitted to the hospital) - Complaints signed by current employee or phone
fax ignored by the employer - Referral notice of a hazard by a credible
safety professional or confirmed report from the
media or by another government agency
20Inspections
- Compliance Safety and Health Officers (CSHOs)
work for the Secretary of Labor to - enter without delay and at reasonable times any
work place - inspect and investigate during regular working
hours and at other reasonable times, - and to perform their work within reasonable
limits and in a reasonable manner.
21Employer may Qualify for "Focused Inspection"
- Has to meet certain conditions
- Inspector will "focus" on these four hazard
areas - Falls
- Struck by
- Caught in/between
- Electrical
22Inspection Process
- CSHO displays official credentials
- Opening conference
- Walk-around inspection
- Closing conference
23Inside an Inspection The Opening
- At the Opening Conference, CSHOs
- Present their credentials to the highest ranking
management official - and everyone else smart
enough to ask. - Explain the general Nature and Scope of the
inspection - why theyre there and where they
intend to look.
24More on the Opening Conference
- Subcontractors should be invited to the opening
conference if the inspection will include their
work areas. - Employees who are members of a union must be
allowed to have a representative present during
the opening conference.
25Inside the Inspection The Walk-Around
- The physical inspection of the workplace is
called the Walk-around. - Employers should always have a representative
walk with the CSHO. - Authorized reps for employees also have the right
to be on the walk-around. - The CSHO decides how to do the walk.
26More on the Walk- Around
- CSHOs have the authority to
- Take photographs and site samples related to the
purpose of the inspection. - Privately interview any employee.
- CSHOs have a duty to
- Be fair, thorough and reasonable in the time and
manner of inspection. - To not create hazards or labor problems.
27Inside an Inspection More Info
- Records Review
- Injury and illness records
- Safety plans
- Contracts
- Training records
- Research
- Manufacturers info
- Industry practices
- OSHA policy
- Reviewing other contractors programs
28Inside an InspectionClosing Conference
- A Closing Conference is held at the end of an
inspection for all representatives. - If more research is needed, a Preliminary
Closing is still given to list concerns so
employers can fix any problems right away. - Closings are a chance to ask questions or to
speak up if folks think the CSHO misunderstood
the situation.
29 What Happens After an OSHA Inspection?
- OSHA may or may not issue citations
- Citations inform employer and employees of the
regulations and standards allegedly violated and
of the proposed time for abatement - Employer must post a copy of each citation at or
near place where violation occurred, for 3 days
or until violation is corrected, whichever is
longer
30Citations
- Other than serious
- Serious
- Repeat
- Willful
- Egregious
31Recordkeeping and Reporting
- Employers of 11 or more employees must maintain
records of occupational injuries and illnesses
- All employers must display the OSHA poster, and
report to OSHA within 8 hours any accident that
results in a fatality or in-patient
hospitalization of 3 or more employees
32Recordkeeping Forms
- Maintained on a calendar year basis
- Summary of records for the previous year must be
posted from February through April
33Recordkeeping The 300 Log
- Each employer shall
- Keep a log and summary of all recordable injuries
and illnesses (Form 300). - Enter each recordable injury and illness on the
log and summary no later than 6 working days
after receiving information that a recordable
injury or illness has occurred.
34Reporting Accidents
- If there is a death or catastrophe
(hospitalization of three or more employees) as
the result of a single work-related incident,
the employer must call and report the event to
OSHA. - Calls must be made within 8 hours.
- Calls can be placed to the National Hotline at
1-800-321-OSHA. Know the areas zip code.
35Sources of Assistance
- OSHA web site (www.osha.gov)
- Consultation assistance
- Federal and State area offices
- Speakers, publications, a/v aids, technical
advice - Training and education
- OSHA Training Institute (OTI) and the OTI
Education Centers - OSHA Outreach Training Program
- OSHA Office of State Programs
- Voluntary Protection Programs
36OSHA Web Site(www.osha.gov)
- About OSHA (events, whats new . . .)
- Compliance Assistance (regulations, directives,
consultation, eTools, training . . .) - Cooperative Programs (VPP, partnerships )
- News Room (publications, news releases . . .)
- Safety / Health Topics (technical links to
various topics) - Statistics (Inspection data, BLS survey link ...)
37Where to Get OSHA Standards
- Federal Register in public libraries or at GPO
web site - CD-ROM subscription through U.S. Government
Printing Office (GPO) - Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) in public
libraries and through GPO - OSHA web site - OSHA standards, interpretations,
directives (www.osha.gov)
38Consultation Assistance
- Provided at no cost
- Developed for smaller employers with more
hazardous operations - Delivered by state government agencies or
universities employing professional safety and
health consultants - No penalties are proposed or citations issued
- Possible violations of OSHA standards are not
reported to OSHA enforcement staff unless
employer fails to eliminate or control any
serious hazard or imminent danger
39OSHA Emergency Hot-Line1-800-321-OSHA
- Report workplace safety or health fatalities or
the hospitalization of 3 or more employees - Report a workplace hazard
- File a complaint about a workplace hazard
- Request information on OSHA
- Request an OSHA publication
40Summary
- OSHA helps save lives and prevent injuries
- OSHA balances a cooperative approach with
traditional enforcement - OSHA standards are the enforceable requirements
for worker safety and health - Inspections are OSHAs way to ensure compliance
- OSHA offers various means of assistance