On January 1, 2015, OSHA rolled out its Severe Injury Reporting Program, requiring all employers to report to OSHA within 24 hours any work-related amputations, inpatient hospitalizations, or loss of an eye. The long standing requirement to report work-related fatalities to OSHA within 8 hours also remains in place.
According to a report issued by OSHA on January 17, 2016 evaluating the impact of the new reporting requirements, before the requirements were established, compliance officers were often dispatched to inspect a fatality in the workplace, only to discover a history of ...
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- Video: How Modern Workplaces Navigate Generational Shifts: One-on-One with Jeff Landes
- Updated New York Retail Worker Safety Act Takes Effect Soon
- Video: Independent Contractor Rule, EEO-1 Reporting, and New York Labor Law Amendment - Employment Law This Week
- Colorado’s Historic AI Law Survives Without Delay (So Far)
- Disparate Impact Liability Under Fire