Injuries during off-hours commute may need to be recorded
If you have drivers or other employees reporting to work outside of normal hours, you’ll want to be aware of new guidance from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
A new letter of interpretation (LOI) says that if an employee is required to return to the workplace outside of the normal commute, that’s a work activity “in the interest of the employer.” This means it’s considered work-related and does not meet the “normal commute” exception.
For purposes of Part 1904, OSHA’s longstanding position has been that injuries and illnesses that occur during an employee’s normal commute to and from work are not work-related and therefore not recordable.
Not a “normal commute”
However, the LOI poses a scenario in which an employee had commuted home for the day but was then directed back to the workplace by the employer to assist with a work-related emergency. The employee was involved in a vehicle accident en route, which resulted in the employee sustaining an injury and hospitalization.
Since it wasn’t the employee’s normal commute and was being done as a “condition of employment,” the resulting injury and hospitalization were work-related and must be recorded on the OSHA 300 log.
No change to “personal use” of a CMV
The new LOI does not affect an FMCSA interpretation saying that time spent “commuting between the driver’s terminal and his or her residence” in a commercial motor vehicle may be recorded as “personal use” or “personal conveyance” (off duty) as long as the driver was relieved of duty.
However, if a driver is called to the terminal outside of normal hours and gets injured on the way, be aware that the injury will have to go on your OSHA log.
Key to remember: If an employee is injured during a commute outside of normal hours, you’ll need to record it on your OSHA injury log.