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

SAFETY & COMPLIANCE NEWS
Keep up to date on the latest
developments affecting OSHA, DOT,
EPA, and DOL regulatory compliance.
Speeding through work zones is deadly, and distracted driving only intensifies the risk. But the danger does not end there: even slow-moving vehicles or those reversing at low speeds can be just as lethal, a fact underscored by two worker fatalities that occurred only days apart despite being hundreds of miles away.
On January 10, 2026, a Michigan tow truck helper who was standing at the rear of their truck cab became pinned between the rollback flatbed carriage and the cab, suffering a fatal head injury. Preliminary findings show that after unloading a vehicle, the flatbed was being returned to its original position when unexpected resistance was encountered. Later, the helper was found on the ground and was pronounced deceased at the scene.
Six short days later in New Hampshire, a pickup truck operator struck a worker while reversing their vehicle on a worksite. Life-saving measures were attempted by emergency responders; however, the struck worker died because of injuries suffered in the incident.
While investigations into both fatalities are still underway, they serve as sobering reminders that workplace tragedies can occur regardless of vehicle direction or speed, underscoring the importance of maintaining rigorous work zone safety practices.
According to the National Work Zone Safety Information Clearinghouse, fatal highway worker injuries involving workers on foot struck by vehicles have increased by 10.7 percent since 2021. From 2021 to 2023, these incidents accounted for an average of 53.5 percent of all fatal highway worker deaths. In 2023 alone, more than 800 people were killed in work zone crashes, and over 37,000 were injured.
The data drives home the concept that work zone safety is moving in the wrong direction, making it critical for organizations to strengthen controls, improve visibility, and reinforce safe work practices. While work zone incidents remain a serious challenge, employers can reduce risk by applying data‑driven practices, proven countermeasures, and structured hierarchical control strategies, including:
Key to remember: Work zone injuries are increasing; therefore, every vehicle movement, no matter the direction, must be controlled using engineering controls, data-informed decisions, worker participation, and consistent hazard management.
In April 2024, federal OSHA issued a final rule addressing the workplace inspection process at 29 CFR 1903.8. California proposes to adopt the federal rule and add further provisions. The proposal would:
A public hearing is scheduled for April 1, 2026, via Zoom; this is also the deadline for submitting comments on the proposal.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) has finalized a broad array of deregulatory changes affecting vehicle standards, inspection requirements, emergency equipment, licensing rules, and more.
Published February 19, 2026, the rule changes have limited impact but they represent the FMCSA’s first salvo at providing regulatory relief under the Trump administration. More rule changes are expected in the near future.
Motor carriers should review the changes now to determine how they might impact their operations. Except as noted, the new rules take effect on March 23, 2026:
Additional deregulatory actions proposed last May are still in process but are expected to be finalized soon. This includes rules to:
Key to remember: The FMCSA has finalized 12 deregulatory actions among 18 proposed in May 2025. The changes could save time and money for both motor carriers and drivers.
Worries about well-being are on the rise, with economic issues topping the list of worker concerns.
In the 2026 Workplace Wellness Survey published in January by the Employee Benefits Research Institute workers rated their level of well-being concern at an average of 5.8 out of 10, up from 5.5 in 2024. Top issues of concern included:
While employers can’t magically make sources of unease disappear, they can provide support to workers to help them cope. When asked which three aspects of their workplace contributed most to their sense of well-being, these were the top worker responses.
Employers can use workplace policies and programs to enhance worker well-being and address anxiety over issues that are chipping away at it. While well-being is affected by things that are beyond an employer’s control, support can be provided through:
Boundaries: To help workers enjoy better work-life balance, place limits on off-hours emails, texts, and phone calls. Don’t make employees responsible for responding to emails or notifications they receive after the workday ends. If 24-hour coverage is required, rotate on-call responsibilities.
Sharing the impact: Understanding how your work benefits others makes it meaningful. Use team meeting announcements, intranet articles, and one-on-one conversations to let workers know how their contributions support customers, coworkers, and the organization as a whole.
Empowerment: Lack of control makes a job more stressful and detracts from meaningful work. Supervisors should listen to suggestions for improvement and, when possible, give workers control over how tasks are done.
Encouraging workers to recharge: Make sure managers know that it’s important for them and their workers to take time off to support their mental health; there should be no shame in asking for paid time off. Establish a simple, consistent process for requests and give employees discretion on when to take time off. Supervisors and managers can model the importance of taking a break from work by taking time off themselves.
Supervisor training: Supervisors are often promoted to their position because they are great at their job, but they may lack experience in managing people. To help them and their teams succeed, offer training that helps supervisors improve people skills such as communication, conflict resolution, and emotional intelligence.
Expressions of thanks: A lack of recognition or acknowledgment from leaders strains job satisfaction. Don’t take workers for granted; thank them for their contributions.
Encouraging connections: Having a friend at work makes employees more engaged with their job. Support workplace connections with activities such as potluck meals, a book club, or after-hours social events. To find ideas that resonate with your workforce, conduct a survey or put together a teambuilding committee. In addition, a mentoring program that pairs less experienced workers with those who have more seniority can encourage a sharing of ideas and build relationships.
Promotion of mental health resources: When concerns escalate and anxiety mounts, professional help can ease the strain. Make sure workers know how to access mental health benefits provided by your company. Use posters, intranet articles, and team meeting announcements to spread the word.
Key to remember: Worker well-being is strained by factors outside of an employer’s control, but encouraging workplace connections, saying thanks, and training managers in effective communication are ways employers can provide support.
The trailer is loaded. The paperwork is ready. The clock is ticking.
For carriers, accepting a hazmat load can feel like a formality, sign the paperwork, close the doors, and get on the road. However, under the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR), that moment before a shipment leaves the facility is a critical compliance checkpoint. It’s often where small oversights turn into big enforcement problems.
DOT doesn’t expect carriers to reclassify hazardous materials or audit a shipper’s entire hazmat program. What it does expect is for carriers to recognize problems that are reasonably apparent. Many enforcement cases don’t involve complex regulatory interpretations, they involve obvious issues that went unchallenged at the dock.
The HMR clearly assigns responsibilities. Shippers are responsible for properly classifying, packaging, marking, labeling, and documenting hazmat. Carriers are responsible for transporting those materials safely and in compliance with DOT requirements.
That division matters, but it doesn’t mean carriers can accept anything placed in front of them. In fact, the HMR specifically states, “No person may accept for transportation or transport by motor vehicle a forbidden material or hazardous material that is not prepared in accordance with the requirements of this subchapter.” If it’s not compliant, don’t accept it.
Shipping papers are often the first place a carrier can spot an issue, and they’re also the easiest way to confirm whether a hazmat shipment “adds up.” Before accepting a load, carriers should review the paperwork for basic completeness. At a minimum, the shipping paper should clearly identify the material as hazardous and include the:
Carriers aren’t expected to verify the technical accuracy of a classification, but missing information, incomplete descriptions, or paperwork that clearly doesn’t match the shipment being offered should raise questions. A quick check at this stage can prevent bigger problems later.
Just as important, the information on the shipping papers should match what’s on the packages. DOT expects carriers to notice marking and labeling problems during normal handling, especially when there’s an obvious mismatch. The UN or NA number and proper shipping name on the shipping papers should match the package markings, and the hazard class listed should make sense with the hazard labels applied to the package.
Carriers don’t need to open packages or inspect inner packagings. But if labels are missing, damaged, obscured, or clearly inconsistent with the shipping papers, that’s a reasonably apparent issue. If the paperwork and the packages aren’t telling the same story at the dock, they won’t hold up any better during an inspection.
Once the paperwork and markings pass a basic consistency check, the next step is assessing the condition of the packages themselves. One of the most common carrier-side violations has nothing to do with classification or documentation; it involves accepting packages that are clearly compromised. Carriers should be alert for:
Carriers should also be aware of loads that don’t appear to be properly secured for transport.
Refusing a load is never convenient, but sometimes it’s the most compliant option. Carriers should seriously consider refusing a hazmat shipment when shipping papers are incomplete or clearly incorrect, packages are leaking or visibly damaged, required labels or markings are missing, or the driver is not trained or qualified for the material being offered.
Key to remember: Accepting a hazmat load isn’t about catching every possible mistake. It’s about exercising reasonable care before a shipment enters the transportation system. Sometimes, compliance starts with one simple question at the dock, “Does this shipment look right?”
Employers don’t have to let employees take Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) leave for reasons that don’t qualify, nor should they. They shouldn’t, however, jump to conclusions about FMLA leave abuse when assessing someone’s leave reasons. Employers should look at all the facts involved before proceeding. A recent court decision agrees.
In April, Toby, an employee, applied for FMLA leave for his chronic kidney stones. The certification indicated that he would need intermittent leave up to 3 times per month for 1 day per episode.
Things went fine until August 23, when Toby asked for time off. The conversation went something like this:
Toby ended up taking 4 days of medical leave.
Based on the phone conversation, the employer charged Toby with FMLA misuse and removed him from work pending an investigatory hearing.
At the hearing, Jolanda, the company’s FMLA manager, said it was clear, based on the conversation, that Toby “….marked off FMLA for an unapproved reason”—so clear that “[t]here wasn’t a need” for the company to “determine if the leave that [Toby] requested was actually used for FMLA protection or for purposes of the FMLA.”
Toby said that he needed to be off both because his kids were starting a new school and because his medical condition had started to flare up. He explained that he initially asked for a personal day, rather than FMLA leave, so he would be paid for the day and could avoid using up his FMLA time.
Toby said he saw a doctor for his flare-up and provided a doctor’s note dated August 24. The note said that Toby had been under a doctor’s care from August 24 to 27.
After the hearing (and despite the doctor’s note), the employer concluded that Toby had misused FMLA leave and fired him.
Toby sued, and the court sided with him, disagreeing with the employer’s argument that Toby had misused FMLA leave. Toby had enough evidence to establish that the employer’s decision to fire him wasn’t “reasonably informed and considered….”
The employer’s only basis for believing Toby misused FMLA leave was his phone call. The call didn’t conclusively establish that Toby engaged in misconduct, especially given his testimony that he needed to deal with both medical needs and family obligations. The doctor’s note also provided evidence that Toby’s request for leave was legitimate.
Pack v. CSX Transportation, Inc.; Southern District of West Virginia; No. 3:24-0688; January 14, 2026.
Key to remember: Employers should look at all the facts of a situation before concluding that an employee abused FMLA leave.


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