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Regulatory Compliance News & Updates

Keep up to date on the latest
developments affecting OSHA, DOT,
EPA, and DOL
regulatory compliance.

Safety & Compliance News

Regulations change quickly. Compliance Network ensures you never miss a relevant update with a personalized feed of featured news and analysis, industry highlights, and more.

RECENT INDUSTRY HIGHLIGHTS

Expert Insights: Safety often born of tragedy
2026-05-29T05:00:00Z

Expert Insights: Safety often born of tragedy

The more I understand OSHA’s regulations and answer questions from safety professionals, the more I keep an eye out for safety wherever I go, whether it’s being alert to where the exits are or whether workers are using personal protective equipment while on a roof in my neighborhood.

Working in the safety field also has meant becoming familiar with tragic events like the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire, in which 146 workers died. More recently, during a walk along Boston’s historic Freedom Trail and surrounding areas, I discovered the Boston Fire Museum and a tragedy I hadn’t heard of.

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Don’t let mental health myths reinforce stigma
2026-05-29T05:00:00Z

Don’t let mental health myths reinforce stigma

Mental health struggles are often misunderstood, leading to negative reactions and preventing people from using resources that can help.

Myths about mental health issues can reinforce damaging beliefs. Consider how mental health is viewed in your workplace and provide information that can help teams work together more effectively and encourage people to reach out for assistance when it’s needed.

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OSHA updates HazCom directive
2026-05-29T05:00:00Z

OSHA updates HazCom directive

Two years after OSHA updated the Hazard Communication standard, the agency published its long-awaited revised CPL 02-02-079, “Inspection Procedures for the Hazard Communication Standard (HCS 2024).” While the document is geared towards OSHA inspectors and how they should issue citations under the updated standard, it provides insights for chemical manufacturers, importers, distributors, and employers as to what the agency will look for during an inspection. This makes it a valuable resource given recent and upcoming compliance dates at 29 CFR 1910.1200(j).

The revised CPL replaces the July 2015 version.

OSHA penalty amounts won’t increase in 2026
2026-05-28T05:00:00Z

OSHA penalty amounts won’t increase in 2026

OSHA won’t increase its penalty amounts in 2026. The agency is required to annually adjust its penalties for inflation, based specifically on the October Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Due to a lapse in funding, BLS did not release the October 2025 data. Because no alternative calculation is allowed, OSHA penalties will remain at the 2025 amounts.

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2026-05-28T05:00:00Z

November's HazCom GHS 7 Deadline: What employers need to know

OSHA’s updated Hazard Communication Standard, now aligned with the 7th revised edition of the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS 7), is being rolled out in phases. One deadline passed in May, and the next arrives in November. For employers, this means now is the time to start making updates. This revision introduces enough meaningful changes that relying on an old hazard communication checklist will not be enough.

First, a Quick Refresher on What HazCom Actually Is

At its core, OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard is designed to make sure workers know what chemicals they are working with and what hazards those chemicals present. It covers the labels on chemical containers, the Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) that provide detailed hazard information, and the training employees need so they can understand and use that information effectively.

What’s Actually Changing in GHS 7

So what is different this time? GHS 7 includes several substantive changes that affect how chemicals are classified, how SDSs are written, and how labels are presented. These are not just wording updates. In some cases, they can change how hazards are described and how information is communicated to workers. The changes are:

  • New and Revised Hazard Categories: GHS 7 expands classification for certain health and physical hazards. Desensitized explosives, for example, now have their own hazard class. Some existing categories have been refined with new subcategories that require different labeling and SDS language.
  • Updated SDS Requirements: Section formatting and content requirements are being revised in several areas. Employers and chemical manufacturers will need to review existing SDS documents to ensure they reflect the updated classification criteria and language. If you’re an employer who receives SDS from suppliers, you’ll need to verify that incoming documents meet the new standard.
  • Label Changes: Some products will require updated pictograms, signal words, or hazard statements based on reclassification under GHS 7. That means physical labels on containers may need to be reprinted and replaced.
  • Exposure Limits and Inhalation Hazards: GHS 7 brings more specificity to how inhalation hazards are communicated, particularly for aerosols and mixtures.

What the May Deadline Covered

OSHA’s GHS 7 update was not designed as a single cutoff date. Instead, it was rolled out in phases, with different obligations applying at different points in time. The May 2026 deadline primarily affected chemical manufacturers, importers, and distributors. By then, those upstream parties were expected to update chemical classifications and begin issuing labels and SDSs that align with the revised standard.

For employers, that phase matters because it marks the point when updated information should begin flowing into the workplace. If you receive hazardous chemicals from suppliers, the SDSs and shipped labels you get should increasingly reflect the new classification language and formatting requirements.

That does not mean employers can treat compliance as only a supplier issue. You are still responsible for making sure the SDSs in your workplace are current, your labels reflect the hazards of the chemicals in use, and employees are trained on the information they rely on. If a supplier is slow to update documentation, that gap can quickly become your problem during an inspection.

That is why now is the time to start reaching out to chemical vendors and reviewing your own program. Ask suppliers whether their SDSs have been updated to GHS 7 standards, track what you receive, and follow up on anything that is missing or unclear. November will arrive quickly, and employers that wait too long may find themselves rushing through updates that should have been planned in advance.

Roadmap for November Update

The best way to approach the November deadline is as a practical compliance project rather than a last-minute document review.

  1. Chemical inventory audit: You cannot update what you have not identified, so pull together a complete inventory of every chemical in the workplace, including cleaning products, maintenance supplies, and production materials. That inventory becomes the baseline for everything that follows.
  2. Review and update your SDS library: Contact suppliers and request GHS 7-compliant SDSs for each product on your inventory. Do not assume existing files are already current. Create a simple tracking system so you know which documents have been updated, which are still pending, and where follow-up is needed.
  3. Audit your physical labels: Walk the facility and compare container labels to the updated hazard information you are receiving. If products have been reclassified or now use different pictograms, signal words, or hazard statements, your in-house labels may also need to change. Starting early is important, especially for larger facilities where relabeling can take time.
  4. Revise your written HazCom program: This should be treated as a living document that reflects current practice. Review it carefully and update language, procedures, and responsibilities so they align with the revised standard and with the way your facility actually manages chemical hazards.
  5. Retrain your workforce and brief supervisors: Employees need to understand what changed, what updated labels and SDSs mean, and how those changes affect handling, storage, and response expectations. Supervisors should receive deeper guidance so they can answer questions, recognize compliance gaps, and reinforce the updated program in day-to-day operations.

Key to remember: Now is the time to prepare for November's Hazard Communication Standard deadline.

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