House committee pushes for $700,000 OSHA fines for certain violations
The House Committee on Education and Labor’s portion of the Build Back Better Act proposes significant increases to OSHA civil penalties. Under the proposal, the OSH Act would be amended as follows:
| Violation | Current max | Proposed max |
| Willful or repeat | $136,532/violation | $700,000/violation |
| Serious | $13,653/violation | $70,000/violation |
| Failure-to-abate | $13,653/day beyond abatement date | $70,000/day beyond abatement date |
Employers should follow the reconciliation process closely. If these penalty changes make it into the final bill, it could have a significant impact.
What is budget reconciliation?
Reconciliation is a tool — a special process — that makes legislation easier to pass in the Senate. Budget reconciliation provides a fast-track process for consideration of bills to implement the policy choices embodied in the annual congressional budget resolution.
How is it different from a regular bill?
Instead of needing 60 votes, a reconciliation bill only needs a simple majority in the Senate.
Reconciliation starts with the congressional budget resolution. The budget cannot be stalled in the Senate by filibuster, and it does not need the President’s signature.
If the budget calls for reconciliation, it tells certain committees to change spending, revenues, deficits, or the debt limit by specific amounts. Each committee writes a bill to achieve its target, and if more than one committee is told to act, the Budget Committee puts the bills together into one big bill.
That bill has special status in the Senate. Like the budget, it cannot be filibustered, and only needs a simple majority to pass.


















































