Full steam ahead: OSHA reveals activity focus for 2025
As regulatory experts, we often wish we could get the inside scoop into OSHA’s upcoming plans. The agency’s Current Activities Update at the National Safety Council conference in Orlando last month didn’t disappoint. OSHA officials Andrew Levinson (Director, OSHA Directorate of Standards and Guidance), Doug Kalinowski (Director, OSHA Directorate of Cooperative and State Programs), and Scott Ketcham (Acting Director, OSHA Directorate of Enforcement Programs) addressed a full room of attendees and shared insights into upcoming rulemakings, compliance assistance focus areas for 2025, and more.
Key regulatory priorities
There are six rules moving faster than others:
- Emergency response. An informal public hearing will be held November 12; OSHA encourages and welcomes interested members of the public to attend virtually.
- Heat illness. The comment period is open until December 30 but is likely to be extended, according to Andrew Levinson.
On a related note, there have been about 6,000 heat inspections since the National Emphasis Program took effect April 2022. - Infectious diseases in healthcare. A proposed rule is projected for November.
- Tree care. A proposed rule is projected for December.
- Workplace violence in healthcare. A proposed rule is projected for December.
- Personal protective equipment in construction. OSHA’s most recent regulatory agenda projected a final rule in September but to date it has not been published.
Compliance assistance focus areas for 2025
Looking forward into next year, OSHA officials outlined several compliance assistance areas of focus, including:
- Building and strengthening relationships with organizations that serve low-wage, justice-impacted, and underserved worker populations in high hazard industry sectors (e.g., healthcare, oil and gas, warehousing, grain handling, food processing, manufacturing, construction, and sanitation), with additional emphasis on those in the Southeast.
- Protecting temporary workers and teen and other young workers.
- Addressing workplace safety and health impacts of climate change (e.g., severe heat and extreme weather). Officials said heat is a year-round issue in the U.S.
- Expanding outreach for whistleblower protections.
- Continuing its emphasis on mental health, particularly in the construction industry.
- Supporting employers in making safety and health a core value. OSHA assistant secretary Doug Parker spoke about this effort in a separate session. The agency is creating tools for employers to use to implement safety and health programs. He emphasized that it’s important for employers to go beyond the regulations to protect workers and mentioned workplace violence and roadway safety as examples.
Other items of note
- Accelerated silicosis. OSHA is very concerned about this disease among workers involved in the manufacturing, finishing, and installing of natural and manufactured stone countertops. Silicosis results in permanent lung damage and is caused by inhaling silica dust particles that then become trapped in lung tissue, causing inflammation and scarring, and reducing the lungs’ ability to take in oxygen.
- VPP (Voluntary Protection Programs) modernization. There are currently about 2,000 workplaces in the VPP and OSHA would like to get more companies involved. VPP recognizes employers and workers who have implemented effective safety and health management systems and maintain injury and illness rates below national Bureau of Labor Statistics averages for their respective industries. OSHA plans to modernize VPP to make the application process more user friendly, among other improvements. The agency sought input regarding specific questions on this topic in April 2023 and held a public hearing in June 2023.
Key to remember: OSHA has a full slate of regulatory and compliance assistance activities for 2025. Our regulatory experts continue to monitor these developments and will share information as it becomes available.