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1. Update Angelo Giannakos, CSP
Corporate Safety Director
Smoot Construction
1907 Leonard Ave
Columbus, OH 43219
614-253-9000
2. Update Focus of DOL
Penalties
Protecting America’s Workers Act
OSHA April 22, 2010 MEMO from David Michaels
Top Ten Citations
General Industry
Construction
New Director of Construction
New Crane Standard – brief summary
Path of a Contested Violation
Questions
3. Update
4. Update The following rules are in the “crosshairs” for pre-rule, proposed rule or final rule acceptance as reported in Spring 2011 Unified Agenda of the DOL at:
http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owasrch.search_form?p_doc_type=UNIFIED_AGENDA&p_toc_level=0&p_keyvalue=
5. Update Pre-rule Stage –Construction Focused
Beryllium
Bloodborne Pathogens
Injury and Illness Prevention Program
Reinforcing and Post-Tensioned Steel Construction
Backing Operations
Proposed Rule Stage
Crystalline Silica
Walking Working Surfaces and Personal Fall Protection Systems
Occupational Injury and Illness Recording and Reporting Requirements
Final Rule Stage
Confined Spaces in Construction
6. Update Protecting Americas’ Workers Act (PAWA)
H.R. 2067, S. 1580
As of 2/1/11 no movement in congress
7. Update The legislation:
Extends the OSH Act and existing job safety protections to all state and local public employees, federal workers and millions of other workers who currently have no OSHA coverage or only limited protection.
Increases OSHA penalties for job safety violations and establishes mandatory minimum penalties for violations resulting in worker deaths, so fines are more than a slap on the wrist. Criminal violations of the OSH Act would be made a felony, instead of a misdemeanor, and be expanded to cover cases that involve serious bodily injuries, not just worker deaths.
8. The legislation (continued)
Enhances anti-discrimination protections for workers who raise job safety concerns and report job injuries. It provides workers the right to pursue their case if OSHA fails to act in a timely fashion and writes into the law a worker's right to refuse unsafe work. The bill makes clear that employers cannot retaliate against a worker for reporting a job injury or illness and prohibits any employer policies or practices that discourage or discriminate against workers for reporting injuries and illnesses.
Expands workers' and union rights in OSHA inspections and enforcement cases. The bill requires that workers be paid for the time spent participating in OSHA inspections. It provides workers and unions the right to contest the classification of violations and proposed penalties and to object to settlements that are inadequate.
Provides victims of job injuries and illnesses and family members the right to be heard in OSHA investigations.
9. Update PAWA Effects on Employers
Civil Penalties will be increased
Willful or repeat – from $70K to $120K
Serious –from $5000 to $8000
Deaths – civil penalties up to $250K but not less than $50K (except companies w/ 25 or fewer- and then no less than $25K)
Inflation adjustments each 4yrs based upon Consumer Price Index
OSH Criminal Penalties will also be increased according to section 3571 of title 18 US Code to include imprisonment
10. Update § 3571. Sentence of fine
(a) In General.— A defendant who has been found guilty of an offense may be sentenced to pay a fine.
(b) Fines for Individuals.— Except as provided in subsection (e) of this section, an individual who has been found guilty of an offense may be fined not more than the greatest of—
(1) the amount specified in the law setting forth the offense;
(2) the applicable amount under subsection (d) of this section;
(3) for a felony, not more than $250,000;
(4) for a misdemeanor resulting in death, not more than $250,000;
(5) for a Class A misdemeanor that does not result in death, not more than $100,000;
(6) for a Class B or C misdemeanor that does not result in death, not more than $5,000; or
(7) for an infraction, not more than $5,000.
(c) Fines for Organizations.— Except as provided in subsection (e) of this section, an organization that has been found guilty of an offense may be fined not more than the greatest of—
(1) the amount specified in the law setting forth the offense;
(2) the applicable amount under subsection (d) of this section;
(3) for a felony, not more than $500,000;
(4) for a misdemeanor resulting in death, not more than $500,000;
(5) for a Class A misdemeanor that does not result in death, not more than $200,000;
(6) for a Class B or C misdemeanor that does not result in death, not more than $10,000; and
(7) for an infraction, not more than $10,000
11. Update Kim Stille, area director for Madison’s OSHA office, said the bill would set intent as the difference between criminal charges and standard fees. For example, she said, if a backhoe operator backs over and crushes a co-worker’s leg, criminal charges would follow if the project manager, CEO or safety director knew the backhoe had service issues and instructed the worker to use it anyway.
Under current rules, Stille said, the company would face a maximum penalty of $70,000 for that kind of willful violation. If the federal bill passes, the penalty could be $120,000 or 10 years in prison.
According to the bill, repeat offenders could face 20-year sentences.
The Daily Reporter Publishing CompanyMay 4, 2010, Paul Snyder reporting
12. Update When will PAWA be enacted?
Bill was introduced April 5, 2009
Hearing on April 28, 2010
No final passage as of February 1 2011
13. Update April 22, 2010 Internal OSHA Memo from David Michaels
History Reductions
History Increases
Repeat Violations
Area Director and Informal Conference Considerations
Expedited Informal Settlement Agreements
Severe Violator Enforcement Program (SVEP)
Gravity Based Penalty (GBP)
Size Reduction
Good Faith
Increase Proposed Minimum Penalties
Additional Administrative Modifications to the Penalty Calculation Policy
14. Update Historical Reduction
Change from 3yr ‘window’ to 5yr window for review of repeat
Historical Increase
Change from 3yr ‘window’ to 5yr window for repeat – leading to 10% increased penalty
Repeat Violations
Change from 3yr to 5yr ‘window’
15. Update Area Director & Informal Conference Considerations
Can still grant up to 30% penalty reduction
250 or less employee companies eligible for additional 20% reduction –If agree to retain consultant
Expedited Informal Settlement Agreement
Area Directors limited to a 30% reduction
Added 20% reduction if agree to retain consultant
16. Update Severe Violator Enforcement Program
High gravity serious violations no longer need to be combined, but can be cited as separate violations, each with its own penalty.
Example would be crew of ten masons on an unsafe scaffold could result in 10 individual citations if the Area Director feels the circumstances warrant
17. Update Gravity Based Penalty (GBP)
18. Update Size Reduction
19. Update Good Faith
Penalty reductions are allowed in recognition of an employer’s effort to implement an effective workplace safety & health management system.
A 15% Quick Fix reduction is available as an abatement incentive for immediately abating hazards at the job site during an inspection
Not available for companies in strategic partnerships
20. Update Increased Proposed Minimum Penalties
From $100 to $500
Additional Administrative Modifications to the Penalty Calculation Policy
Now will reduce individual penalties rather than adding all together and granting a reduction of the total
Will be a serial calculation instead of a summed calculation
21. Update In the example given; there would be an increased penalty by about 50%
22. Update Conclusion regarding the Memo
Changes will generally increase overall penalty dollars.
Average serious violation up from $3K to $4K
24. Update - Construction Top 10 of 2010
25. Jim Maddux was named OSHA's new director of the Directorate of Construction by agency administrator David Michaels on Dec. 20.
Maddux has been with OSHA since 1990, when he worked as a statistician. He later joined the Directorate of Standards and Guidance, where he most recently served as the director of the Office of Physical Hazards and acting director of the Office of Engineering Safety.
Before Maddux's appointment, the Directorate of Construction was led by acting head Ben Bare, who also serves as its deputy director.
26. New Crane Summary --All power operated equipment that can hoist; lower; and horizontally move a suspended load
Ground Conditions- sufficiently firm, drained and graded
Operator Certification
Assembly/Disassembly-competent & qualified
Power Lines- begin at 20ft
Signaling- qualified
Tower Cranes- Foundations, Structural support, Plumb Tolerance, Climbing Procedures, Post-Erection Load Test and Monthly Inspection
27. Path of a Contested Violation
Once an employer chooses to contest a citation or penalty (or both); it goes through several steps
28. Violation occurs, employer cited
Employer appeals; case is assigned to an administrative law judge
ALJ holds hearings, goes over evidence and listens to testimony
ALJ renders a decision
Parties disagreeing with ALJ can appeal to the Commissioner Level
29. At this point two paths become evident:
6A. A select number of commissioners accept the case (gets heard)
6B. An inadequate number of commissioners wish to hear the case (doesn’t get heard)
30. 6A Path
Commissioners (OSHRC has 3) review the case, evidence, filings and ALJ decision and may hear oral arguments (nominated by President and confirmed by Senate)
Commissioners render their decision
Parties disagreeing with the commissioners’ decision may appeal to the US Court of Appeals
31. 6B Path
The party may take the case to the US Court of Appeals
32. Last step available to both 6A and 6B Paths
Case appealed to the US Court of Appeals