Small employers rack up the most HazCom violations
If you think large employers with hundreds or thousands of chemicals rack up the highest number of Hazard Communication (HazCom) violations, you’re not alone. Until a colleague brought it up, I also made that assumption. Indeed, a review of fiscal year (FY) 2024 inspection data shows small employers – those with fewer than 20 employees – garnered the most citations.
Which small employers have the most violations?
What types of small employers are we talking about? Think building contractors, hardware stores, auto repair, and machine shops. The top five industries with the most citations under 1910.1200 are as follows:
#1 - Specialty trade contractors in construction (NAICS 238), 395 citations. This includes:
- Foundation, structure, and building exterior contractors;
- Building equipment contractors;
- Building finishing contractors; and
- Other specialty trade contractors.
#2 - Fabricated metal product manufacturing (NAICS 332), 219 citations. This includes:
- Forging and stamping;
- Cutlery and handtool manufacturing;
- Architectural and structural metals manufacturing;
- Boiler, tank, and shipping container manufacturing;
- Hardware manufacturing;
- Spring and wire products;
- Machine shops;
- Turned product;
- Screw, nut, and bolt manufacturing;
- Coating, engraving, heat treating, and allied activities; and
- Other fabricated metal product manufacturing.
#3 - Nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing (NAICS 327), 190 citations. This includes:
- Clay product and refractory manufacturing;
- Glass and glass products;
- Cement and concrete products;
- Lime and gypsum products; and
- Other nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing.
#4 – Repair and maintenance (NAICS 811), 135 citations. This includes:
- Automotive repair and maintenance;
- Electronic and precision equipment repair and maintenance;
- Commercial and industrial machinery and equipment (except automotive and electronic) repair and maintenance; and
- Personal and household goods repair and maintenance.
#5 – Merchant wholesalers, durable goods (NAICS 423), 73 citations. This includes the following wholesalers:
- Motor vehicle and motor vehicle parts and supplies;
- Furniture and home furnishing;
- Lumber and other construction materials;
- Professional and commercial equipment and supplies;
- Metal and mineral (except petroleum);
- Household appliances and electrical and electronic goods;
- Hardware, and plumbing and heating equipment and supplies;
- Machinery, equipment, and supplies; and
- Miscellaneous durable goods.
What does HazCom require?
If you have even one employee who’s exposed to one hazardous chemical, you’re covered by HazCom and must comply with the requirements of 1910.1200. The standard defines hazardous chemical as “any chemical that’s classified as a physical hazard or a health hazard, a simple asphyxiant, combustible dust, or hazard not otherwise classified.” To help clarify OSHA’s requirements, further terms are defined in 1910.1200(c). The standard also contains some exemptions in paragraph (b)(6).
Employers covered by HazCom must:
- Develop and implement a written HazCom program, which describes how the company is complying with HazCom (e.g., where Safety Data Sheets (SDSs) are stored, how training is conducted).
- Identify and list all non-exempted hazardous chemicals in the workplace (this is called the chemical inventory and is part of the written HazCom program requirement).
- Ensure there’s an SDS for each hazardous chemical and that SDSs are accessible to employees in their work area.
- Ensure containers of hazardous chemicals are properly labeled.
- Communicate hazard information to employees through labels, SDSs, and formal training programs. Employees must be trained prior to being exposed to hazardous chemicals and whenever a new chemical hazard is introduced. Training must address:
- How employees can detect the presence or release of a hazardous chemical in the work area (such as with continuous monitoring devices);
- The physical and health hazards of the chemicals in the work area;
- How workers can protect themselves from these hazards;
- An explanation of the employer’s written HazCom program, the labels, and the SDS, and how workers can obtain and use this information.
- The requirements of the HazCom standard (i.e., that chemical hazard information must be passed downstream from manufacturers or importers to the employer, who then communicates this information to employees, in the form of SDSs and labels, and that employees have a right to know the hazards of the chemicals they’re exposed to).
- Operations in the work area where hazardous chemicals are present; and
- The location and availability of the written HazCom program, including the chemical inventory, and SDSs.
Key to remember: Small employers racked up the highest number of HazCom violations in FY 2024. If you have even one employee exposed to one hazardous chemical, you’re covered by 1910.1200 and must comply with its requirements.