1 / 38

Cal/OSHA Are Your ready?

Cal/OSHA Are Your ready?. Dr. Don Rhodes Safety Dynamics Group Presented by Greater Lakewood Chamber of Commerce January 29, 2013. Cal/ osha is coming: what to expect. Dr. Don Rhodes. Safety Dynamics Group, Inc. 562-425-4886. 4,609 us workers died on the job in 2011.

varick
Télécharger la présentation

Cal/OSHA Are Your ready?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cal/OSHAAre Your ready? Dr. Don RhodesSafety Dynamics Group Presented by Greater Lakewood Chamber of CommerceJanuary 29, 2013

  2. Cal/osha is coming:what to expect Dr. Don Rhodes Safety Dynamics Group, Inc. 562-425-4886

  3. 4,609 us workers died on the job in 2011 “With every one of these fatalities, the lives of a worker’s family members were shattered and forever changed. We can’t forget that.” - Former US Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis

  4. Minimum standards “OSHA was developed to ensure a safe and healthful environment for workers by setting minimum standards for workplace safety and health.” Introduction to 29 Code of Federal Regulations

  5. STATE PROGRAM ORFEDERAL PROGRAM • Federal OSHA created in 1970 • Cal/OSHA created in 1973 • Now 26 states Federal / 26 State

  6. General Duty Clause Each employer "shall furnish . . . a place of employment which is free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees."

  7. Why Ab 2774? • Rate of serious citations of all citations issued • Fed-OSHA: 77% • National average: 43% • California: Only 19% • California used a different definition for “serious physical harm,” equating it only with serious physical injury. • Threat of Fed-OSHA take-over.

  8. The $5,000 fine Failure to report a serious injury to Cal/OSHA within 8 HOURS will result in a mandatory $5,000 fine.

  9. Serious physical harm • Injury or illness (Cal/OSHA REPORTABLE) • Inpatient hospitalization in excess of 24 hours • Loss of any member of the body • Any serious degree of permanent disfigurement • Loss of functionality for more than 72 hours • Serious illness or impairment of organ function or nervous system

  10. Door is Wide-open Under 2774 interpretation, serious physical harm may be caused by a single or repetitive practice, means, method, operation or process.

  11. Four Scariest Words • “60 Minutes is HERE!” • “Cal/OSHA is HERE!” • Are you ready

  12. Inspection triggers • Imminent danger • Catastrophes and fatal accidents • Complaints and referrals • Follow-up inspections • Targeted High-hazard Industries

  13. OSHA INSPECTIONS • Cal/OSHA Inspector presents credentials • Inspector asks to meet an appropriate employer representative • Employees trained to notify management

  14. Confirm identity • Employers should always ask to see credentials • Employer may call local Cal/OSHA office to verify identity of inspector

  15. Opening Conference • The Inspector: • Explains the purpose of the visit and how the establishment was selected • Provides a copy of the complaint (if applicable) • Explains what the scope of the inspection will be

  16. Opening Conference • Inspector will ask for an authorized employee representative (union rep) to accompany them during the inspection

  17. The Inspection Process • Trade secrets remain confidential • Employees are protected from retaliatory discrimination for exercising their rights

  18. The Inspection Process • The Inspector: • Determines route and duration of the inspection • Walks thru the establishment to identify safety and health hazards • Is allowed to talk privately with employees about health and safety practices

  19. The Inspection Process • The Inspector may : • Note safety and health conditions and practices • Take photos/video recordings • Measure noise levels • Collect air samples to monitor employee exposure to toxic fumes, gases, and dust

  20. The Inspection Process • Evaluate existing engineering controls • Examine records and written programs • Cover part or all of an establishment • Examine safety reports (i.e., Injury logs, OSHA Form 300)

  21. The Inspection Process • Inspector points out unsafe or unhealthful conditions • Inspector discusses feasible corrective action • Violations corrected immediately may demonstrate good faith for penalty consideration

  22. The Closing Conference • Inspector reviews all observed unsafe and unhealthful conditions • Inspector indicates violations for which a citation and penalty may be issued

  23. The Closing Conference • Inspector will not indicate any specific penalty but informs employer of appeal rights • Good time for the employer to produce records of compliance efforts and provide information to help determine time frames for abatement

  24. After the Closing Conference • Inspector reports findings • Area Director determines whether citations will be issued and whether penalties will be proposed

  25. Citations • Employer will receive citations and notices by certified mail • Employer must post a copy of each citation at or near the place the violation occurred for three days or until it is abated

  26. Citations • Regulations and standards alleged to have been violated • The proposed length of time set for their abatement

  27. violations • Other-than-serious • Serious • Willful • Repeated • Failure-to-abate

  28. Other-Than-Serious • Direct relationship to job safety and health but would not cause death or serious physical harm • Penalty $0 to $7,000 • May be adjusted downward as much as 95% (size, good faith, and history)

  29. Serious • Substantial probability that death or serious physical harm could result • Penalty $6,000 to $18,000 • May be adjusted downward for size, good faith, and history

  30. Willful • Employer intentionally and knowingly • Is aware of the hazardous condition • Violates a standard or obligation of the Act • Makes no reasonable effort to eliminate the hazard

  31. Willful • Penalty $18, 000 to $70,000 • Criminal sanctions may be imposed by D.A. if it results in the death of an employee • Penalty of $50,000 ($1,000,000 corporation) • Six-month imprisonment • Or both

  32. Repeat • Inspection reveals a substantially similar violation is found and the original citation has become a final order • Penalties up to $70,000 for each violation

  33. Failure-to-Abate • Employer fails to correct a prior violation • Penalties up to $7,000 per day beyond the prescribed abatement date

  34. Additional Violations • Falsifying records, reports or applications - $10,000 or six months imprisonment or both • Posting requirements - up to $7,000 • Assaulting or intimidating or interfering with the inspection - $5,000 and three years imprisonment

  35. Appeals and reviews • Employers may appeal the citations • Employers may request an informal hearing with the Area Director • Obtain help from a safety professional to meet appeal deadlines and to negotiate penalties with Cal/OSHA

  36. citation • Will become the “final order,” without an appeal or if appeal is not submitted timely • Must be posted in a prominent location or given personally to each employee

  37. A good safety program • Protects your employees • Protects your business • Passes a Cal/OSHA Inspection

  38. Safety and Health Program • Elements of an effective safety and health program: • Management commitment and employee involvement • Worksite analysis • Hazard prevention and control • Safety and health training www.safetydynamicsgroup.com 562-425-4886

More Related