OSHA’s E-reporting revisions expected in December
In December, OSHA expects to publish a rule changing how employers electronically submit their injury data. Many employers submit the 300A Annual Summary by March 2nd each year. After the change, smaller employers would still submit the 300A, but many employers with 100 or more employees would need to file the 300 Log and 301 reports as well.
Currently, employers required to submit the 300A include establishments in any industry with 250 or more employees, and establishments in specific industries with 20 to 249 employees.
An establishment is a single physical location. For example, grocery stores and hotels must submit the 300A for each establishment that has at least 20 employees. The employee count is not based on the number of employees in the entire company.
What will change?
Under the proposed rule, only employers in listed industries will need to submit. Many establishments with 250 or more employees would be off the hook. Instead, the new rule would require that:
- Establishments with 20 or more employees in a covered industry submit the 300A, and
- Establishments with 100 or more employees in a covered industry submit the 300A, 300 Log, and 301 incident reports.
The proposed lists of covered industries didn’t change much, but establishments with 100 or more employees would have to submit more information.
When OSHA originally created this requirement, the agency wanted all three forms. For various reasons, including lawsuits about confidentiality, OSHA pulled back and required only the 300A. In an attempt likely intended to prevent similar lawsuits, the proposed rule requires employers filing the 300 Log and 301 forms to remove employee names, employee addresses, and treating physician names. That would increase challenges for employers to remove information before submission.
When will it take effect?
OSHA announced an intent to publish the final rule in December. Even if it gets published on schedule (rules often appear a month or two late), it might not take effect in time for the March 2, 2023, reporting deadline.
OSHA typically gives a 60-day period before a published rule takes effect. For example, if the change came out in mid-December, it might take effect in mid-February. However, that’s the middle of the reporting period, and many employers could have already submitted their 300As. OSHA hopefully wouldn’t change the rules in the middle of the reporting period.
Also, OSHA might need to update their portal to accept the new files. OSHA will likely want to sort and search the 301 forms. And of course, some organizations may file legal challenges again, potentially causing delays.
In summary, OSHA hopes to publish the final rule in December, but rules often appear late. OSHA must first submit the rule to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. That can take a couple months, and OSHA has not sent the rule to OMB as of September 21. Finally, when the rule appears, the agency should provide 60 days for employers to comply.
To avoid changing the rule in the middle of the reporting period, the changes would need to take effect before January 1. And to meet that deadline, OSHA would have needed to submit the rule to OMB already.
Key to remember
Employers likely won’t have to worry about the reporting change until the 2024 reporting, allowing an extra year to prepare. But when it comes, it will be a big change for establishments with 100 or more employees.