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A penalty up to $16,131 can be slapped on an OSHA citation for EACH serious violation. The trouble is more than one of these violations may be spotted during an inspection. On average, OSHA finds about three violations per inspection. That could add up to a hefty bill of over $48,000 after one visit.

Wouldn’t you like to know the frequently cited serious violations, so you can focus your compliance efforts? Now you can! OSHA posted its most frequently cited serious violations for general industry, maritime, and construction for fiscal year (FY) 2024. You’ll see three presentations and 46 bar charts. Consider them "cheat sheets" for compliance!

Note that if death or serious physical harm can result from a workplace hazard and the employer knew or should have known the hazard exists, OSHA calls it a “serious” violation. The serious violation provision is found in section 666 of Title 29 of the U.S. Code.

The maximum penalty amount is specified at 29 CFR 1903.15. That maximum for serious violations is speculated to climb about 2.6 percent in January 2025, to about $16,550! OSHA is required by law to hike civil penalties annually for inflation.

Major takeaways

Of all the industries, citations for 29 CFR 1926.501(b)(13) were the most frequently cited in FY 2024, with 5,110 citations. That regulatory subparagraph requires fall protection for residential construction.

OSHA cited construction 14,176 times for the 10 most frequently cited serious violations for that industry. This is down 4 percent from FY 2023. Whereas the agency cited general industry “just” 5,929 times in its top 10. This was a decrease of less than 1 percent from the previous year.

Shipyards, marine terminals, and longshoring received 24, 26, and 16 citations, respectively, in each of their top 5 lists. This reflected a 4 percent upswing for shipyards in FY 2024, but a drop of 41 percent for marine terminals, and no change for longshoring.

When comparing the data between FY 2024 and 2023, the top serious violations remained relatively unchanged. Eight violations reappeared in each of the general industry and construction top 10s. Shipyards maintained their number one violation, year over year.

Subparagraphs for fall protection training certification records and recognizing/avoiding unsafe hazards were new rankings on the construction top 10 list. Also, violations for point-of-operation machine guarding and respirator fit testing made their debut on the general industry top 10.

Industry highlights

Five of the 46 bar charts offer either the top 10 or top 5 lists for 29 CFR 1910, 1915, 1917, 1918, and 1926. The remaining bar charts examine the top 5 lists for each subpart of 29 CFR 1910 and 1926.

For general industry, the serious regulatory paragraphs with the most citations included:

  1. 1910.212(a)(1), Machine guarding – Types of guarding methods, 1,099 violations;
  2. 1910.1200(e)(1), Hazard communication – Written program, 988 violations;
  3. 1910.1200(h)(1), Hazard communication – Information/training, 820 violations;
  4. 1910.134(e)(1), Respirators – Medical evaluations, 557 violations;
  5. 1910.147(c)(4)(i), Lockout/tagout – Procedures, 540 violations;
  6. 1910.178(l)(1)(i), Powered industrial trucks – Competency training, 441 violations;
  7. 1910.151(c), Medical services and first aid – Eye/body flushing facilities, 385 violations;
  8. 1910.212(a)(3)(ii), Machine guarding – Point of operation, 375 violations;
  9. 1910.134(c)(1), Respirators – Employee fit testing, 374 violations; and
  10. 1910.1200(g)(8), Hazard communication – Readily accessible safety data sheets, 350 violations.

For maritime, you won’t find large numbers of violations, so the top violation in each of the three maritime industries included the following:

  • Shipyards — 1915.73(d), Guarding of deck openings/edges, 8 violations;
  • Marine terminals — 1917.26(f) – USCG-approved life ring available, 6 violations; and
  • Longshoring — 1918.22(e) – Fall protection for gangways over water, 6 violations.

For construction, OSHA tallies the following top 10 serious subparagraphs:

  1. 1926.501(b)(13), Fall protection – Residential construction, 5,110 violations;
  2. 1926.1053(b)(1), Ladders – Must extend 3 feet above landing, 1,927 violations;
  3. 1926.102(a)(1), Eye and face protection – Use of appropriate protection, 1,917 violations;
  4. 1926.503(a)(1), Fall protection – Training workers exposed to fall hazards, 1,466 violations;
  5. 1926.100(a), Head protection – Use of protection, 804 violations;
  6. 1926.501(b)(1), Fall protection – Unprotected sides/edges, 750 violations;
  7. 1926.20(b)(2), General safety and health – Inspection by competent person, 734 violations;
  8. 1926.503(b)(1), Fall protection training – Written certification record, 555 violations;
  9. 1926.453(b)(2)(v), Aerial lifts – Fall protection while in basket, 517 violations; and
  10. 1926.21(b)(2), General safety and health – Unsafe hazards recognition/avoidance, 396 violations.

To find the presentations, visit OSHA’s Training and Reference Materials Library webpage and scroll down to “Most Frequently Cited.”

Key to remember

OSHA posted its Most Frequently Cited Serious Violations slide presentations for FY 2024. Use them to help prioritize your compliance efforts.

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Most Recent Highlights In Environmental

2026-06-25T05:00:00Z

Hazardous waste episodic events: What to do when a bad month happens

Every generator has that month. A tank clean-out gets scheduled; a forklift punctures a tote, and suddenly you've generated way more hazardous waste than you normally would. If you're a Very Small Quantity Generator (VSQG) or Small Quantity Generator (SQG), that one bad month could technically bump you into Large Quantity Generator (LQG) status, potentially subjecting the facility to LQG requirements such as contingency planning, personnel training, and biennial reporting.

The good news is that EPA built in an escape hatch. The 2016 Generator Improvements Rule added 40 CFR Part 262, Subpart L (the "episodic event" provision), which lets you keep your normal generator category for that month, if you follow the rules in 40 CFR 262.232 exactly.

Scenario 1: The planned tank clean-out

Picture a metal finishing shop that's normally an SQG, generating about 400 kg/month of spent plating solution. They finally get around to cleaning out an old process tank that's been sitting idle for three years. That clean-out produces about 1,800 kg of sludge in one shot and enough to push them into LQG numbers for the month.

Since this is something the facility planned and scheduled for, it's a planned episodic event. Here's what the employer would need to do:

  • Notify EPA (or the delegated state agency) at least 30 calendar days before the clean-out starts, using EPA Form 8700-12. Include the start/end dates, why the event is happening, estimated waste types and quantities, and a 24-hour emergency contact.
  • Double-check the facility's EPA ID number to make sure it is current.
  • Stage the waste properly with compliant containers or tanks and labeled with the episodic event start date.
  • Get it manifested and shipped off-site within 60 calendar days of the start date.
  • Hang onto every record including the notification, manifests for 3 years after the event ends.

Scenario 2: The unplanned spill

Next, picture a packaging plant. They are a VSQG generating around 80 kg/month. They have a forklift punch a hole in a 275-gallon tote of listed solvent and by the time cleanup is done, they're looking at about 900 kg of contaminated absorbent and solvent residue. Nobody planned this. It's not part of normal operations. That makes it an unplanned episodic event. Here is what they should do:

  • They have 72 hours to notify EPA or the state by phone, email, or fax. There will be no time to fill out paperwork first.
  • Follow that up by submitting EPA Form 8700-12 after the fact, documenting what happened since you couldn't give advance notice.
  • Keep the spill cleanup waste separate from your routine waste streams and label it with the episodic start date.
  • The same 60-day shipping window and 3-year recordkeeping requirement apply here too.

The things you can't skip

Whether the event is planned or unplanned, there are a handful of conditions that apply across the board and missing any one of them could cost you the episodic event relief entirely.

  • One event per year, period. Both VSQGs and SQGs get exactly one episodic event a year unless they petition the Regional Administrator under 40 CFR 262.233 for a second. That second one must be the opposite type, so if your first was planned, the next must be unplanned.
  • The clock doesn't wait. Exactly 30 days out for planned and 72 hours for unplanned are required. Miss either window or you lose the relief entirely, meaning full LQG status kicks in for that period.
  • The 60-day shipping clock starts on day one of the event, not when you send the notification, so make sure to track it immediately.
  • Manifest the waste properly. Episodic waste can ship under the standard Subpart B manifest rules, even in the same load as your regular waste.
  • Write everything down. Three years of solid records such as dates, causes of event, quantities, and where it went is what separates a clean inspection from an enforcement headache.

Keys to remember: The episodic event provision rewards generators who plan, classify the event correctly, notify on time, ship within 60 days, and document everything for three years.

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Indiana adds permanent underground carbon dioxide storage rules

Effective date: June 10, 2026

This applies to: Entities that seek to participate in carbon sequestration projects

Description of change: The Natural Resources Commission adopted rules for permanent underground carbon dioxide storage, establishing:

  • The rules for entities seeking to petition the Indiana Department of Natural Resources to issue involuntary integration orders for pore spaces, and
  • The rules for storage operators seeking to apply for certificates of project completion.

These regulations add options for entities; the requirements apply only if the options are utilized.

The rules impact entities seeking to participate in carbon sequestration projects. The regulations also affect pore space owners and surface owners.

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Virginia reinstates power plant CO2 budget program

Effective date: April 24, 2026

This applies to: Power plant owners

Description of change: The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality reinstated the Virginia CO2 Budget Trading Program Regulation, which implements the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI). Participation in the RGGI was stopped in 2023, but the state will resume participation on July 1, 2026, the same date on which the compliance requirements take effect.

The regulation requires fossil fuel-fired units that serve an electricity generator with a capacity of 25 megawatts or more to obtain enough allowances to cover CO2 emissions, which they can purchase in the September and December RGGI auctions.

The department also adopted amendments to the regulations, including establishing a one-time 6-month control period from July 1, 2026, to December 31, 2026.

Related state info: Clean air operating permits state comparison

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Hampshire updates sludge management rules

Effective date: May 15, 2026

This applies to: Owners and operators of drinking water and wastewater treatment plants that generate sludge; land application sites; and facilities that treat, manage, or dispose of sludge

Description of change: The New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services amended sludge management rules. Major changes include:

  • Reinstating 5-year site and facility permit renewals (instead of 10 years),
  • Adding annual reporting requirements for sludge haulers (which already apply to septage haulers), and
  • Requiring all applications to be submitted electronically.

The rule also codifies per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) sampling (implemented in 2019 for the sludge quality certificate program).

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Jersey adopts permanent remediation standards for PFAS

Effective date: June 15, 2026

This applies to: Contaminated sites subject to the remediation regulations for contaminated groundwater, soil, and soil leachate

Description of change: The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) formally adopted its interim remediation standards for specific per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), including:

  • Groundwater quality standards for hexafluoropropylene oxide dimer acid and its ammonium salt (GenX chemicals); and
  • Soil and soil leachate remediation standards for:
    • Perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA);
    • Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS);
    • Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA);
    • GenX chemicals; and
    • Methanol.

The interim standards have been in place since 2022 and 2023, requiring regulated entities to conduct remediation to ensure these PFAS are cleaned up.

Additionally, the NJDEP amended the technical requirements to mandate analyses of the following chemicals in all media when contaminants are unknown or not well documented at a contaminated site:

  • PFNA,
  • PFOS,
  • PFOA,
  • GenX chemicals, and
  • 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin.
See More

Most Recent Highlights In Transportation

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Indiana adds permanent underground carbon dioxide storage rules

Effective date: June 10, 2026

This applies to: Entities that seek to participate in carbon sequestration projects

Description of change: The Natural Resources Commission adopted rules for permanent underground carbon dioxide storage, establishing:

  • The applicability of carbon sequestration projects, and
  • The rules for the Department of Natural Resources issuing involuntary integration orders and certificates of project completion.

The rules impact entities seeking to participate in carbon sequestration projects under IC 14-39. The regulations also affect pore space owners and surface owners.

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Nevada adds requirements for hazardous waste recyclers

Effective date: June 8, 2026

This applies to: Hazardous waste recyclers

Description of change: The State Environmental Commission adopted regulations to add requirements for entities that recycle certain hazardous waste, including compliance with:

  • Certain federal requirements;
  • Local zoning requirements, if applicable;
  • Specific reporting and notification requirements; and
  • Other particular regulations of the commission.

The rules also:

  • Exempt owners and operators of certain facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled from the above requirements, and
  • Add fees for written determinations (required to construct or operate a facility or mobile unit for hazardous waste recycling) and for the facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled.
2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Virginia reinstates power plant CO2 budget program

Effective date: April 24, 2026

This applies to: Power plant owners

Description of change: The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality reinstated the Virginia CO2 Budget Trading Program Regulation, which implements the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI). Participation in the RGGI was stopped in 2023, but the state will resume participation on July 1, 2026, the same date on which the compliance requirements take effect.

The regulation requires fossil fuel-fired units that serve an electricity generator with a capacity of 25 megawatts or more to obtain enough allowances to cover CO2 emissions, which they can purchase in the September and December RGGI auctions.

The department also adopted amendments to the regulations, including establishing a one-time 6-month control period from July 1, 2026, to December 31, 2026.

Related state info: Clean air operating permits state comparison

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Hampshire updates sludge management rules

Effective date: May 15, 2026

This applies to: Owners and operators of drinking water and wastewater treatment plants that generate sludge; land application sites; and facilities that treat, manage, or dispose of sludge

Description of change: The New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services amended sludge management rules. Major changes include:

  • Reinstating 5-year site and facility permit renewals (instead of 10 years),
  • Adding annual reporting requirements for sludge haulers (which already apply to septage haulers), and
  • Requiring all applications to be submitted electronically.

The rule also codifies per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) sampling (implemented in 2019 for the sludge quality certificate program).

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Jersey adopts permanent remediation standards for PFAS

Effective date: June 15, 2026

This applies to: Contaminated sites subject to the remediation regulations for contaminated groundwater, soil, and soil leachate

Description of change: The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) formally adopted its interim remediation standards for specific per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), including:

  • Groundwater quality standards for hexafluoropropylene oxide dimer acid and its ammonium salt (GenX chemicals); and
  • Soil and soil leachate remediation standards for:
    • Perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA);
    • Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS);
    • Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA);
    • GenX chemicals; and
    • Methanol.

The interim standards have been in place since 2022 and 2023, requiring regulated entities to conduct remediation to ensure these PFAS are cleaned up.

Additionally, the NJDEP amended the technical requirements to mandate analyses of the following chemicals in all media when contaminants are unknown or not well documented at a contaminated site:

  • PFNA,
  • PFOS,
  • PFOA,
  • GenX chemicals, and
  • 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin.
See More

Most Recent Highlights In Safety & Health

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Nevada adds requirements for hazardous waste recyclers

Effective date: June 8, 2026

This applies to: Hazardous waste recyclers

Description of change: The State Environmental Commission adopted regulations to add requirements for entities that recycle certain hazardous waste, including compliance with:

  • Certain federal requirements;
  • Local zoning requirements, if applicable;
  • Specific reporting and notification requirements; and
  • Other particular regulations of the commission.

The rules also:

  • Exempt owners and operators of certain facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled from the above requirements, and
  • Add fees for written determinations (required to construct or operate a facility or mobile unit for hazardous waste recycling) and for the facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled.
2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Virginia reinstates power plant CO2 budget program

Effective date: April 24, 2026

This applies to: Power plant owners

Description of change: The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality reinstated the Virginia CO2 Budget Trading Program Regulation, which implements the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI). Participation in the RGGI was stopped in 2023, but the state will resume participation on July 1, 2026, the same date on which the compliance requirements take effect.

The regulation requires fossil fuel-fired units that serve an electricity generator with a capacity of 25 megawatts or more to obtain enough allowances to cover CO2 emissions, which they can purchase in the September and December RGGI auctions.

The department also adopted amendments to the regulations, including establishing a one-time 6-month control period from July 1, 2026, to December 31, 2026.

Related state info: Clean air operating permits state comparison

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Hampshire updates sludge management rules

Effective date: May 15, 2026

This applies to: Owners and operators of drinking water and wastewater treatment plants that generate sludge; land application sites; and facilities that treat, manage, or dispose of sludge

Description of change: The New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services amended sludge management rules. Major changes include:

  • Reinstating 5-year site and facility permit renewals (instead of 10 years),
  • Adding annual reporting requirements for sludge haulers (which already apply to septage haulers), and
  • Requiring all applications to be submitted electronically.

The rule also codifies per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) sampling (implemented in 2019 for the sludge quality certificate program).

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Jersey adopts permanent remediation standards for PFAS

Effective date: June 15, 2026

This applies to: Contaminated sites subject to the remediation regulations for contaminated groundwater, soil, and soil leachate

Description of change: The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) formally adopted its interim remediation standards for specific per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), including:

  • Groundwater quality standards for hexafluoropropylene oxide dimer acid and its ammonium salt (GenX chemicals); and
  • Soil and soil leachate remediation standards for:
    • Perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA);
    • Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS);
    • Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA);
    • GenX chemicals; and
    • Methanol.

The interim standards have been in place since 2022 and 2023, requiring regulated entities to conduct remediation to ensure these PFAS are cleaned up.

Additionally, the NJDEP amended the technical requirements to mandate analyses of the following chemicals in all media when contaminants are unknown or not well documented at a contaminated site:

  • PFNA,
  • PFOS,
  • PFOA,
  • GenX chemicals, and
  • 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin.
2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Nevada adds requirements for hazardous waste recyclers

Effective date: June 8, 2026

This applies to: Hazardous waste recyclers

Description of change: The State Environmental Commission adopted regulations to add requirements for entities that recycle certain hazardous waste, including compliance with:

  • Certain federal requirements;
  • Local zoning requirements, if applicable;
  • Specific reporting and notification requirements; and
  • Other particular regulations of the commission.

The rules also:

  • Exempt owners and operators of certain facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled from the above requirements, and
  • Add fees for written determinations (required to construct or operate a facility or mobile unit for hazardous waste recycling) and for the facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled.
See More

Most Recent Highlights In Human Resources

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Virginia reinstates power plant CO2 budget program

Effective date: April 24, 2026

This applies to: Power plant owners

Description of change: The Virginia Department of Environmental Quality reinstated the Virginia CO2 Budget Trading Program Regulation, which implements the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI). Participation in the RGGI was stopped in 2023, but the state will resume participation on July 1, 2026, the same date on which the compliance requirements take effect.

The regulation requires fossil fuel-fired units that serve an electricity generator with a capacity of 25 megawatts or more to obtain enough allowances to cover CO2 emissions, which they can purchase in the September and December RGGI auctions.

The department also adopted amendments to the regulations, including establishing a one-time 6-month control period from July 1, 2026, to December 31, 2026.

Related state info: Clean air operating permits state comparison

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

North Carolina approved revisions to wastewater discharge rules

Effective date: May 1, 2026

This applies to: Facilities with domestic wastewater discharges up to 2 million gallons per day

Description of change: The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) adopted a rule that adds a permitting option to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program for facilities with domestic wastewater discharges of up to 2 million gallons per day.

DEQ removed the ban on new or expanded discharges of oxygen-consuming waste when the 7Q10 and 30Q2 flows are both 0 for these facilities. In other words, it allows systems to discharge domestic wastewater to zero-flow receiving streams, provided the system:

  • Meets qualifying criteria,
  • Complies with specific effluent limits, and
  • Uses low-energy methods before discharging wastewater to the receiving stream.

It’ll likely benefit areas where the cost of piping to a higher-flowing stream farther away is prohibitive.

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Hampshire updates sludge management rules

Effective date: May 15, 2026

This applies to: Owners and operators of drinking water and wastewater treatment plants that generate sludge; land application sites; and facilities that treat, manage, or dispose of sludge

Description of change: The New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services amended sludge management rules. Major changes include:

  • Reinstating 5-year site and facility permit renewals (instead of 10 years),
  • Adding annual reporting requirements for sludge haulers (which already apply to septage haulers), and
  • Requiring all applications to be submitted electronically.

The rule also codifies per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) sampling (implemented in 2019 for the sludge quality certificate program).

2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

New Jersey adopts permanent remediation standards for PFAS

Effective date: June 15, 2026

This applies to: Contaminated sites subject to the remediation regulations for contaminated groundwater, soil, and soil leachate

Description of change: The New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP) formally adopted its interim remediation standards for specific per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), including:

  • Groundwater quality standards for hexafluoropropylene oxide dimer acid and its ammonium salt (GenX chemicals); and
  • Soil and soil leachate remediation standards for:
    • Perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA);
    • Perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS);
    • Perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA);
    • GenX chemicals; and
    • Methanol.

The interim standards have been in place since 2022 and 2023, requiring regulated entities to conduct remediation to ensure these PFAS are cleaned up.

Additionally, the NJDEP amended the technical requirements to mandate analyses of the following chemicals in all media when contaminants are unknown or not well documented at a contaminated site:

  • PFNA,
  • PFOS,
  • PFOA,
  • GenX chemicals, and
  • 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin.
2026-06-24T05:00:00Z

Nevada adds requirements for hazardous waste recyclers

Effective date: June 8, 2026

This applies to: Hazardous waste recyclers

Description of change: The State Environmental Commission adopted regulations to add requirements for entities that recycle certain hazardous waste, including compliance with:

  • Certain federal requirements;
  • Local zoning requirements, if applicable;
  • Specific reporting and notification requirements; and
  • Other particular regulations of the commission.

The rules also:

  • Exempt owners and operators of certain facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled from the above requirements, and
  • Add fees for written determinations (required to construct or operate a facility or mobile unit for hazardous waste recycling) and for the facilities that recycle certain hazardous materials without storing those materials before they’re recycled.
See More
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