OSHA emboldened to issue heat proposal in 2024
When pressed at a recent House hearing about the status of an Outdoor/Indoor Heat rulemaking, Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su told the Committee on Education & the Workforce that OSHA expects to put out a proposal “later this year.” Meanwhile, the agency will “continue to do the enforcement to make sure that workers are healthy and safe on the job.”
NEWS UPDATE: On July 2, 2024, OSHA posted an unofficial version of its proposed rule on Heat Injury and Illness Prevention in Outdoor and Indoor Work Settings. Watch for the official publication in the Federal Register soon, which sources say will kick of a 120-day public comment period. OSHA’s proposed rule would require both private and public sector employers to develop programs and implement controls to protect employees from heat hazards in both the outdoor and indoor work environments. The public is encouraged to submit written comments on the rule once it is published in the Federal Register.
Her firm words on May 1 align with a presentation OSHA head Doug Parker made last week, when he gave a status report to the National Advisory Committee on Occupational Safety & Health (NACOSH). Parker noted that his agency is working expeditiously to complete a Heat proposal. At the same time, he warned that OSHA is not waiting for a rule to enforce heat hazards. The agency has conducted more than 5,000 heat-related inspections since April 2022.
Timing of the proposal
The “end-of-year” publication date helps put a pin on this year’s calendar. Yet, it’s unclear whether Acting Secretary Su meant end of fiscal or calendar year 2024. (The fiscal year ends on September 30, 2024.) We’re watching for the OSHA Spring 2024 agenda in the weeks ahead to shed more light on the tentative date of the proposal.
In response to a status question from House member Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR), Su explained: “Heat has become an occupational hazard ... So we are working on what would be the first nationwide standard for heat (indoor and outdoor heat) ... We are in the midst of that work now. We are engaging with the small businesses ... and we expect to put out a notice rule also later this year.”
Bonamici asked if there was any chance anything would be issued before the heat comes this summer. Su smiled and explained that rulemaking takes time because: “We do have to be thoughtful. We have to engage with all the stakeholders ... There’s a lot of ... pieces to making sure that a rule is ... consistent with our authority and is going to have the impact that we want it to have.”
What will be in the proposal?
The content of the proposed rule is not public. However, based on materials OSHA provided last fall to a small business panel, we know the agency is considering the following regulatory elements:
- Scope,
- Heat injury and illness prevention program,
- Hazard identification and assessment,
- Hazard prevention and control measures,
- Medical treatment and heat-related emergency response,
- Worker training,
- Recordkeeping, and
- Communication on multi-employer worksites.
What about enforcement?
The National Emphasis Program (NEP) for outdoor and Indoor heat-related hazards runs through early April 2025, unless canceled or extended by a superseding directive. While OSHA indicates there have been over 5,000 inspections under the NEP, we could only find 72 hits in a search of the “General Duty Clause” (GDC) violations for the word “heat” since the launch of the program in April 2022. Of course, citations under the NEP may also include those for:
- OSHA injury and illness recordkeeping and reporting standards under 29 CFR 1904;
- OSHA sanitation standards under 29 CFR 1910.141, 29 CFR 1915.88, 29 CFR 1917.127, 29 CFR 1918.95, 29 CFR 1926.51, and 29 CFR 1928.110; and
- OSHA construction programs and training standards at 29 CFR 1926.20 and 1926.21.
A closer look at GDC violations for heat
The GDC is section 5(a)(1) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, which states, “Each employer shall furnish to each of his employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees.”
GDC citations for heat generally allege that:
- The employer did not furnish employment and a place of employment which were free from recognized hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm to workers;
- Workers were not protected from the hazard of high heat while performing their job duties; and
- Such exposures are likely to lead to the development of serious heat-related illnesses such as, but not limited to, heat cramps, heat stress, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke.
A GDC citation may also provide:
- A description of the work activity witnessed by the inspector,
- Ambient conditions like the wet bulb globe temperature range,
- The clothing type worn by workers,
- Any heat-related illness suffered by a worker,
- Whether a worker died of a heat-related illness, and
- A feasible and acceptable method(s) of abatement.
Citation amounts vary with some reaching up to the maximum $16,131 for a serious, non-repeat, non-willful violation. However, total penalties for an inspection can be more if OSHA finds violations of the related regulations listed earlier or other regulations.
Key to remember
Ranking officials say OSHA is working diligently in hopes of publishing a proposed Heat rule later this year.