Compliance Just Got Easier: Stay ahead of regulatory changes with instant notifications on updates that matter.

FREE TRIAL UPGRADE!
Thank you for investing in EnvironmentalHazmatHuman ResourcesHuman Resources, Hazmat & Environmental related content. Click 'UPGRADE' to continue.
CANCEL
YOU'RE ALL SET!
Enjoy your limited-time access to the Compliance Network!
A confirmation welcome email has been sent to your email address from ComplianceNetwork@t.jjkellercompliancenetwork.com. Please check your spam/junk folder if you can't find it in your inbox.
YOU'RE ALL SET!
Thank you for your interest in EnvironmentalHazmatHuman ResourcesHuman Resources, Hazmat & Environmental related content.
WHOOPS!
You've reached your limit of free access, if you'd like more info, please contact us at 800-327-6868.
News Page, Top Banner, Guests

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

Child bereavement leave law reintroduced at the federal level
2026-04-22T05:00:00Z

Child bereavement leave law reintroduced at the federal level

On April 6, Congressman Brad Schneider (IL), along with Congressmen Brian Fitzpatrick (PA), Don Beyer (VA), and Sean Casten (IL), reintroduced the Sarah Grace-Farley-Kluger-Barklage Act (HR 8207), a bill to ensure that parents who’ve lost a child are entitled to 12 weeks of bereavement leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The measure has been introduced many times before, however, and has yet to gain any traction toward becoming law.

Currently, the FMLA provides eligible employees up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave for certain life events, such as birth or adoption, a serious health condition, or to care for an immediate family member. During this leave, an employer may not terminate an employee who qualifies for such leave.

Keep reading...Show less
Ladders, familiar work, serious risks
2026-04-22T05:00:00Z

Ladders, familiar work, serious risks

Ladder-related standards consistently rank among OSHA’s top 10 most cited violations. Every year, serious injuries continue to occur, not because ladders are unsafe, but because they’re used in ways people don’t recognize them as risky.

Preventing ladder incidents starts with recognizing when everyday tasks introduce risk and making deliberate choices to use, position, and reassess ladders before unsafe habits take hold.

Keep reading...Show less
Treat your workplace culture gently and it will reward you
2026-04-22T05:00:00Z

Treat your workplace culture gently and it will reward you

Workplace culture encompasses how employees interact with each other, engage with their teams and jobs, and how they feel about their coworkers, managers, and the organization. Because it has so many parts, workplace culture could be viewed as a large and sensitive creature.

Why sensitive? Because workplace culture is easily damaged, and hard to repair once broken. Despite the well-intended mission statements and values that an organization publishes on jobsites and in handbooks, it’s the day-to-day behaviors that can hurt or even kill company culture.

Keep reading...Show less
From shipping dock to destination: A refresher on the food transportation rule
2026-04-22T05:00:00Z

From shipping dock to destination: A refresher on the food transportation rule

Food safety doesn’t stop at the loading dock—and neither does accountability. Keeping food safe for consumption requires every party in the supply chain to do their job.

The Sanitary Transportation of Human and Animal Food (STHAF) rule sets clear expectations. The rule lays out practical requirements designed to prevent contamination, temperature abuse, and unsafe food from ever reaching consumers.

Keep reading...Show less
Details that can trip up a hazmat shipment
2026-04-21T05:00:00Z

Details that can trip up a hazmat shipment

Hazmat shipments rarely fail because of one big, dramatic mistake. They normally go wrong because of small details that slip through the cracks, like paperwork that isn’t quite right or labels that don’t match the shipment. These foundational issues continue to be the most common reasons shipments get delayed, rejected, or fined during inspections.

That’s what makes them so frustrating. These aren’t advanced compliance challenges. They’re the basics, and yet they still trip people up in real-world operations where speed, volume, and changing requirements all collide.

Keep reading...Show less
Search all news