Are you ready for OSHA’s new injury e-reporting rule on January 1, 2024?
Many employers submit injury data through OSHA’s Injury Tracking Application (ITA) by March 2 each year. OSHA changed some of those reporting requirements effective January 1, 2024. This revisions kept most of the previous rule, but added significant obligations for certain employers with 100 or more employees at a single location.
The rules did not, however, change which industries must report. If an establishment was required to report in 2023 based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code, then it will need to report in 2024. However, if an establishment was not required to report in 2023 based on the NAICS code, then it won’t have to report in 2024.
Old and new rules
First, like the old rule, establishments with 20 to 249 employees in industries listed in Appendix A must electronically submit the 300A annual summary. The industry list did not change, although OSHA update from the 2012 NIACS codes to the 2017 version, affecting two codes.
The 2012 NAICS group 4521 (Department Stores) is split between the 2017 NAICS groups 4522 (Department Stores) and 4523 (General Merchandise Stores, including Warehouse Clubs and Supercenters). Also, the 2012 NAICS group 4529 (Other General Merchandise Stores) is included in 2017 NAICS group 4523.
Second, establishments with 250 or more employees must e-report the 300A if the establishment maintains a 300 Log.
Third, establishments with 100 or more employees in industries listed in the new Appendix B must e-submit information from their 300 Log and 301 forms in addition to the 300A. They will not submit employee names or addresses, nor treating physician names.
Establishment size
Employers with multiple establishments may have different obligations for each location. To illustrate, all manufacturing establishments (NAICS codes starting 31, 32, or 33) with 20 or more employees must submit the 300A. However, only manufacturers with 100 or more employees that are listed in Appendix B will submit the 300 Log and 301s. To offer examples:
- NAICS codes starting 325 for chemical manufacturing do not appear in Appendix B, so they’ll submit only the 300A even if the location has 100 or more employees.
- NAICS code 3325 for hardware manufacturing does appear in Appendix B. An establishment with 100 or more employees must submit the 300 Log, 301 forms, and 300A.
Employers should verify which 2017 NAICS code describes each establishment. To identify the correct code, visit census.gov/naics which allows searching the 2017 list. OSHA recognizes that some establishments might have more than one NAICS code. The ITA includes a frequently asked question that advises, “Choose the code that represents the activity that generates the most revenue for your establishment and/or has the most employees, whichever is more applicable to your business.”
In summary, establishments:
- Under 20 employees need not report.
- Exempt from keeping an OSHA 300 Log need not report.
- With 20-249 employees listed in Appendix A will send the 300A.
- With 250 or more employees required to maintain a 300 Log will send the 300A.
- With 100 or more employees listed in Appendix B will send the 300 Log, 301 forms, and 300A.
Key to remember: For most employers, reporting obligations won’t change for 2024, but some locations with 100 or more employees will have to file additional information.