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SAFETY & COMPLIANCE NEWS

Keep up to date on the latest developments affecting OSHA, DOT, EPA, and DOL regulatory compliance.

Regulations change quickly. Compliance Network ensures you never miss a relevant update with a personalized feed of featured news and analysis, industry highlights, and more.

RECENT INDUSTRY HIGHLIGHTS

e-Manifest Third Rule compliance checklist: Countdown to December 1
2025-09-12T05:00:00Z

e-Manifest Third Rule compliance checklist: Countdown to December 1

The date of December 1 often evokes thoughts of colder weather, the start of the Christmas season, and … waste manifests?! That’s certainly the case this year for hazardous waste handlers. On December 1, 2025, the rest of the Third Rule’s compliance requirements for electronic manifests take effect.

The Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) final Third Rule, established under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), amends the Hazardous Waste Electronic Manifest System (e-Manifest system) standards. Many of the requirements began in January 2025. The Third Rule’s remaining regulatory changes start on December 1, 2025. Are you prepared to comply?

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Shifting from the ‘Great Resignation’ to the ‘Big Stay’
2025-09-12T05:00:00Z

Shifting from the ‘Great Resignation’ to the ‘Big Stay’

From 2020 through roughly 2024, large numbers of workers left their jobs in what became known as the “Great Resignation.” Now the pendulum has swung the other way, and the term being used to describe what’s happening in the labor force is the “Big Stay.”

The Big Stay is a trend of employees hanging on to their current jobs, reducing turnover and helping employers maintain a stable workforce.

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4 risky driver scenarios—and how to avoid disqualification
2025-09-12T05:00:00Z

4 risky driver scenarios—and how to avoid disqualification

Commercial motor vehicle (CMV) drivers must meet strict qualification rules. A disqualified driver operating a CMV can lead to serious problems like:

  • Out-of-service violations along with fines and stranded assets,
  • Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) Driver Fitness score damage, and
  • Excessive judgments if a crash occurs.

4 scenarios and best practices

The four disqualification scenarios below are quite common, but the recommended best practices can help avoid them.

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FMLA eligibility lasts the year, but denials don’t
2025-09-11T05:00:00Z

FMLA eligibility lasts the year, but denials don’t

To take leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), employees have to work for covered employers and also meet three eligibility criteria. They must:

  • Have worked for their employer for at least 12 months (need not be consecutive),
  • Have worked at least 1,250 hours in the 12 months before the leave begins, and
  • Work at a location with at least 50 company employees within 75 miles.

Eligibility remains intact

Once an employee meets these three criteria for a particular reason, their eligibility lasts for the duration of the entire 12-month leave year period. Employers don’t need to reassess an employee’s eligibility during that timeframe for that leave reason.

FMLA denials don’t remain intact

On the flip side, once employers deny an employee’s leave because the employee didn’t meet the eligibility criteria, employers must reassess that denial once the employee meets the eligibility criteria. The denial doesn’t remain intact for the duration of the 12-month leave year.

If, after not meeting the eligibility criteria, an employee does meet it, regardless of when that happens in the 12-month leave year period, the employee will be eligible to take FMLA leave for a qualifying reason. Employers would need to designate any leave taken after an employee meets the eligibility criteria as FMLA leave.

An employee might, for example, be on non-FMLA leave when they meet the 12-month eligibility criterion. In that situation, any leave taken after the employee meets the 12-months worked threshold would be FMLA leave. The same would be true for the 1,250-hours worked threshold.

Rolling backward challenges

For employers that use the rolling backward method to calculate the 12-month leave year period, an employee’s eligibility for leave for a particular reason would continue for 12 months from the date of the first FMLA absence for the condition.

When a new leave year begins

Regardless of which method employers use to calculate the 12-month leave year, they would recalculate an employee’s eligibility when the employee asked for leave for the first time in a new 12-month leave year.

Key to remember: If employers deny FMLA leave because employees didn’t meet the eligibility criteria, they have to reassess eligibility once employees meet the criteria; the denial doesn’t automatically remain intact. Eligibility, once met, however, doesn’t change for a particular leave reason.

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5 days, over 4,600 vehicle inspections
2025-09-11T05:00:00Z

5 days, over 4,600 vehicle inspections

This year's annual unannounced five-day hazardous materials/dangerous goods (HM/DG) inspection and enforcement blitz took place from June 9-13, 2025, resulting in 4,629 inspections. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance (CVSA) inspection event involves having specially trained officers inspect commercial motor vehicles transporting HM/DG for regulatory compliance and placing decals on vehicles without any critical vehicle/cargo tank violations.

For the 2025 inspection, 831 CVSA decals were placed on vehicles, indicating no critical violations. Conversely, inspectors identified 1,169 HM/DG violations, with 51 percent of those (598) having out-of-service violations. These vehicles were banned from further travel until corrected.

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