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Regulatory Compliance News & Updates

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

Safety & Compliance News

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.
Why give employees time off to grieve?
2026-06-30T05:00:00Z

Why give employees time off to grieve?

The continually growing number of state leave laws makes employee leave management more and more challenging for companies to maintain production while staying compliant. Employers might wonder whether they should review their own company leave policies and make changes. With employees legally entitled to various types of leave, perhaps company policies can be scaled back.

Private employers have no federal bereavement law to comply with. Unless covered by a state bereavement leave law, employers are free to craft their own related company policies. Those policies usually define which family members of employees are included, such as a spouse, child, or parent. Some policies include more family members, like grandparents, but might allow less time off in the wake of their passing.

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Secondary containment alternative: Does your oil-filled operational equipment qualify?
2026-06-30T05:00:00Z

Secondary containment alternative: Does your oil-filled operational equipment qualify?

Facilities that run like a well-oiled machine often rely on just that — operational equipment that stores and uses oil to function (like hydraulic systems). But wherever oil is stored, there’s always the possibility of a leak, and spilled oil can do serious harm, especially if it reaches water.

That’s where the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasure (SPCC) rule comes in. Usually, regulated facilities must equip oil-filled operational equipment with general secondary containment, which is designed to temporarily hold discharged oil until it can be properly cleaned up. However, some facilities may have another compliance option available.

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Permitting 101: what you need to know
2026-06-30T05:00:00Z

Permitting 101: what you need to know

Permits are generally needed any time a carrier needs to transport a load which:

  • exceeds the standards set by the state or federal government;
  • or that requires them to operate within a jurisdiction in which they do not have permanent permits.

Examples include oversize/overweight loads, or temporary trip and fuel permits. Obtaining the proper permits allows a carrier to operate within another jurisdiction for a single trip or a period of time.

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How to build employee accountability without drama
2026-06-30T05:00:00Z

How to build employee accountability without drama

Fewer than half of managers in a recent Gallup survey rated themselves “outstanding” or “exceptional” at creating accountability, which is a key leadership skill that involves holding employees responsible for meeting agreed-upon expectations.

Done well, accountability helps employees meet commitments, complete tasks, and achieve shared goals. Done poorly, it can damage trust, lower engagement, decrease motivation, and increase retention issues.

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OSHA reopens comment period for proposed changes to the Respiratory Protection standard
2026-06-30T05:00:00Z

OSHA reopens comment period for proposed changes to the Respiratory Protection standard

After OSHA’s Advisory Committee on Construction Safety and Health (ACCSH) reviewed the rulemaking, the agency reopened the comment period for proposed changes to the Respiratory Protection rule.

Originally published in the Federal Register on July 1, 2025, the proposed rule removes some medical evaluation requirements from the Respiratory Protection standard at 1910.134 for certain types of respirators, including filtering facepiece respirators and loose-fitting powered air-purifying respirators. OSHA determined that using a respirator may place a physiological burden on employees based on the:

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