osha multi employer citation policy cpl 02-00-124

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OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124. Jim Shelton, HNAO CAS. Multi-Employer Work Site Policy. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124
Page 2: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Jim Shelton, HNAO CAS

Page 3: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Multi-Employer Work Site Policy

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, in a 2-1 decision, ruled that in the case of Solis v. Summit Contractors Inc., OSHA regulation 29 C.F.R. Sec. 1910.12(a) “is unambiguous in that it does not preclude OSHA from issuing citations to employers for violations when their own employees are not exposed to any hazards related to the violations.” Therefore, according to the ruling, the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC) “abused its discretion in determining that the controlling employer citation policy conflicted with the regulation.”

Page 4: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Multi-Employer Work Site Policy

• Employers’ have a statutory duty to comply with OSHA standards and to exercise reasonable diligence to determine whether violations of those standards exist

• On multi-employer worksites (in all industry sectors) more than one employer may be citable for a hazardous condition that violates an OSHA standard

Page 5: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Multi-Employer Work Site Policy

• To determine whether more than one employer is cited a two step process must be followed:

STEP ONE – Determine whether the employer is a Creating, Exposing, Correcting, or Controlling employerSTEP TWO – Determine whether the employers actions were sufficient to meet the obligations based on which category that applies

Page 6: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Multi-Employer Work Site Policy

• Important notes:– An employer may have multiple roles– Only exposing employers can be cited for

General Duty Clause violations– The measures that a controlling employer must

take to satisfy its duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent and detect violations is less than what is required of an employer with respect to protecting its own employees

Page 7: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Creating’ Employer

• Creating Employer – The employer that caused a hazardous condition that violates an OSHA standard

• An employer must not create a violative conditions and is citable even if only employees exposed are of other employers

Page 8: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Creating’ Employer

• Example – Host employer operates a factory and contracts with Company S to service machinery. Host fails to cover drums of chemicals despite S’s repeated requests to do so. This results in airborne levels of a chemical that exceed the Permissible Exposure Limit

Page 9: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Creating’ Employer

• Step 1 – Host is a creating employer because it caused employees of S to be exposed to air contaminants above the PEL

• Step 2 – Host failed to implement measures to prevent accumulation of the air contaminant. It could have implemented the simple engineering control of covering the drums. Having failed to implement a feasible control the Host is citable

Page 10: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Exposing’ Employer

• Exposing Employer – An employer whose own employees are exposed to the hazard

• If the hazardous condition was created by another employer the exposing employer is citable if:– Knew of the hazardous condition or failed to

exercise due diligence to discover it– Failed to take steps consistent with its authority

to protect its employees

Page 11: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Exposing’ Employer

– If the exposing employer has authority to correct the hazard it must do so

– If the exposing employer lacks authority to correct the hazard, it is citable if it fails to:

• Ask the creating and/or controlling employer to correct the hazard

• Inform its employees of the hazard• Take reasonable alternative protective measures• In imminent danger situations the employer can be cited

for not removing EEs from the job to avoid the hazard

Page 12: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Exposing’ Employer

• Example – Employer Sub S is responsible for inspecting and cleaning a work area in Plant P around a large permanent hole each day. OSHA requires guardrails. There are no guardrails and fall protection is not used even though it is feasible to do so. Sub S has no authority to install guardrails. They asked Plant P to do so but they refused.

Page 13: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Exposing’ Employer

• Step 1 – Sub S is an exposing employer• Step 2 – While Sub S has no authority to install

guardrails, it is required to comply with OSHA rules to the extent feasible ie. steps to protect employees and ask employer that controls the hazard (Employer P) to correct it. Although Sub S asked for guardrails to be installed, and it was not corrected, Sub S is responsible to take reasonable alternative measures such as using personal fall protection. Sub S can be cited

Page 14: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Correcting’ Employer

• Correcting Employer – Employer engaged in a common undertaking, on the same worksite, as the exposing employer and is responsible for correcting a hazard

• Usually occurs where an employer is given responsibility of installing and/or maintaining particular safety/health equipment or devices

• Must exercise reasonable care in preventing and discovering violations and must meet its obligations of correcting the hazard

Page 15: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Correcting’ Employer

• Example – Employer C is hired to erect and maintain guardrails throughout a large 15 story project. C inspects all areas each day in the morning and afternoon along with the area where material is delivered to the perimeter. Other subcontractors are required to report damaged/missing guardrails to the GC. Employee C corrects them when found or reported.

Page 16: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Correcting’ Employer

• Cont… On the project a few instances of damaged guardrails have occurred. After the afternoon inspection of Floor 6 workers accidently damage a guardrail in one area. No one tells C of the damage and C has not seen it. OSHA shows up the next day prior to the morning inspection of Floor 6. None of C’s own employees are exposed to the hazard but other EEs are exposed.

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‘Correcting’ Employer

• Step 1 – C is a correcting employer since it is responsible for erecting and maintaining fall protection equipment

• Step 2 – The steps C implemented to discover and correct damaged guardrails were reasonable in light of the amount of activity and size of the project. It exercised reasonable care in preventing and discovering violations. It is not citable for the damaged guardrails since it could not have reasonably known of the violation

Page 18: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Controlling’ Employer

• Controlling Employer – Employer who has general supervisory authority over the worksite including the power to correct safety and health violations itself or require other to correct them. Control can be established by contract, in the absence of explicit contractual provisions, by exercise of control in practice

• A controlling employer must exercise reasonable care to prevent and detect violations on the site

Page 19: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Controlling’ Employer

• The extent of the measures that a controlling ER must implement to satisfy this duty of reasonable care is less than what is required of an employer with respect to protecting its own EEs. This means they are not normally required to inspect for hazards as frequently or to have the same level of knowledge of the applicable standards or trade expertise as the employer hired

Page 20: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Controlling’ Employer

• Factors Related to Reasonable Care:– The scale of the project– Nature and pace of work including frequency

with which the numbers or types of hazards change as the work progresses

– How much the controlling ER knows both about the safety history and safety practices of the ER it controls and the ER’s level of expertise

Page 21: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Controlling’ Employer

– More frequent inspections are normally needed if the controlling ER knows the other ER has a history of non-compliance or possibly at the beginning of the project if they have never worked with the ER before and doesn’t know their history

– Less frequent inspections may be appropriate where controlling ER sees strong indications that the ER has implemented effective safety and health efforts

Page 22: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Controlling’ Employer

• Factors Related to Reasonable Care cont:– The most important indicator of an effective

safety and health effort by the other ER is a consistently high level of compliance. Other indicators include:

– Effective, graduated system of enforcement for non-compliance coupled with regular jobsite safety meetings and safety training

Page 23: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

‘Controlling’ Employer

• Evaluating Reasonable Care:– In evaluating whether reasonable care was exercised

in preventing and discovering violations, consider if they:

– Conducted periodic inspections of appropriate frequency

– Implemented an effective system for promptly correcting hazards

– Enforced compliance with an effective, graduated system of enforcement and follow-up inspections

Page 24: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Inspections

• A some standards do outline responsibilities between a site and its contractors. For example:– 1910.119(h) Process Safety Management– 1910.146(c)(8) Confined Spaces– 1910.147(f)(2) Lock Out Tag Out– 1910.1200 (e)(2) Hazard Communication– 1926.1402 Cranes in Construction

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Finding a Compliance Directive

CPL 02-00-124 and many other directives can be found on the OSHA website www.osha.gov

Page 26: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Finding a Compliance Directive

Search for any CPL by keyword, date, or number

Page 27: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Finding a Compliance Directive

Results for ‘Multi Employer’

Page 28: OSHA Multi Employer Citation Policy CPL 02-00-124

Disclaimer

• This information has been developed by an OSHA Compliance Assistance Specialist and is intended to assist employers, workers, and others as they strive to improve workplace health and safety. While we attempt to thoroughly address specific topics [or hazards], it is not possible to include discussion of everything necessary to ensure a healthy and safe working environment in a presentation of this nature. Thus, this information must be understood as a tool for addressing workplace hazards, rather than an exhaustive statement of an employer’s legal obligations, which are defined by statute, regulations, and standards. Likewise, to the extent that this information references practices or procedures that may enhance health or safety, but which are not required by a statute, regulation, or standard, it cannot, and does not, create additional legal obligations. Finally, over time, OSHA may modify rules and interpretations in light of new technology, information, or circumstances; to keep apprised of such developments, or to review information on a wide range of occupational safety and health topics, you can visit OSHA’s website at www.osha.gov.

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