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SAFETY & COMPLIANCE NEWS

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

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

2026-02-23T06:00:00Z

New York expands workplace violence prevention programs in health care

Effective date: September 2026

This applies to: Employers that are health care facilities, meaning a “general hospital” or a “nursing home” as defined in Section 2801 of the New York Public Health Law.

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Expert Insights: Silence is frustrating when it comes to DEI compliance
2026-02-20T06:00:00Z

Expert Insights: Silence is frustrating when it comes to DEI compliance

If you’ve spent the past year wondering when the federal government would clarify what constitutes unlawful diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in the workplace, you might want to move to a more comfortable chair, because the wait continues.

Recent court activity highlights the ongoing uncertainty over what is meant by “illegal DEI” in Executive Orders issued by the president in January 2025, titled “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity” and “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing.”

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PFAS, pretreatment, and biosolids: The growing challenge for water permitting
2026-02-20T06:00:00Z

PFAS, pretreatment, and biosolids: The growing challenge for water permitting

Per and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) pose one of the most urgent and complex challenges for wastewater systems in the United States. As federal agencies reconsider their regulatory strategies and states impose their own standards, publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) and the industries that discharge to them face increasing pressure to control PFAS at the source. These pressures affect pretreatment permits, industrial dischargers, and biosolids management, forming a rapidly evolving compliance landscape. Recent federal assessments and state actions show that PFAS in wastewater and biosolids is no longer a distant regulatory issue. It is a primary driver shaping future POTW permitting.

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Equal threat, opposite direction: Reversing hazards in work zones
2026-02-19T06:00:00Z

Equal threat, opposite direction: Reversing hazards in work zones

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.

Starting the year in the wrong direction

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.

Reversing fatal facts

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:

  • Prioritizing worker participation in identifying hazards and evaluating/implementing control options;
  • Analyzing crash and trend data to target safety strategies and guide interventions;
  • Addressing commonly cited OSHA violations to close work zone safety gaps before injuries or fatalities occur;
  • Implementing safety countermeasures such as speed management tools, enhanced roadway delineation, improved lighting, pedestrian protections, and median barriers;
  • Coordinating with engineers, traffic control companies, equipment manufacturers, and law enforcement to establish effective communication and staging strategies;
  • Maintaining a written hazard control plan that includes emergency and non-routine operations;
  • Evaluating the effectiveness of controls and adjusting when needed.

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.

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Cal/OSHA proposes to adopt federal ‘worker walkaround’ rule
2026-02-19T06:00:00Z

Cal/OSHA proposes to adopt federal ‘worker walkaround’ rule

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:

  • Allow both a representative of the employer and a representative authorized by employees to accompany the Cal/OSHA inspector during the worksite inspection. The inspector is authorized to allow multiple representatives for employer and employee and to resolve any disputes as to who the representatives are.
  • Establish who may be designated as the representative authorized by employees for purposes of accompanying the inspection;
  • Establish the inspector’s authority to lead the inspection and ensure the conduct of the representatives who participate does not interfere with the effectiveness of the workplace inspection; and
  • Allow the employer to protect trade secrets by requiring that any employee representative in an area containing trade secrets be an employee of the company. If this requirement results in excluding the only available employee representative, then the inspector will be required to interview employees who work in the area as part of the inspection.

A public hearing is scheduled for April 1, 2026, via Zoom; this is also the deadline for submitting comments on the proposal.

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