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H.R. 5663, The Miner Safety and Health Act of 2010, was recently introduced in response to the tragic mine accident in West Virginia. However, the legislation also seeks to make drastic changes to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) by turning back the clock on well over 15 years of progress in improved workplace safety and creating a more adversarial relationship between employers and OSHA. The bill focuses solely on introducing vague new standards for criminal liability and imposes complicated and costly procedures for adjudicating whistleblower cases.H.R. 5663 should be opposed for the following reasons:• Workplace injury, illness and fatality rates are at all time lows thanks to the 15-year long bipartisan approach to workplace safety started by the Clinton Administration. H.R. 5663 will hamper continued construction industry safety improvements through increased litigation and discouragement of cooperative relationships.• Most companies are in fact not "bad actors." This legislation would create vague new standards for criminal conduct and establish new penalties that will likely lead to more costly litigation.• The legislation would allow OSHA inspectors to order a work stoppage at a jobsite without showing imminent danger or affording employers with proper due process.• H.R. 5663 creates a new and unnecessarily complex whistleblower paradigm.Action Needed:Please take a minute and use the tools on the Íæż½ã½ã Legislative Action Center to write your elected officials in opposition to H.R. 5663.

The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has scheduled two additional stakeholder meetings, one in Washington, D.C., and one in Sacramento, Calif., to solicit comments in developing the Injury and Illness Prevention Program proposed rule. These additional meetings are part of a series of five.

WASHINGTON – OSHA announced today that the Severe Violators Enforcement Program directive is effective June 18th. The agency announced in April that it was implementing the program to focus on employers who continually disregard their legal obligations to protect their workers.OSHA’s SVEP focuses enforcement efforts on employers who willfully and repeatedly endanger workers by exposing them to serious hazards. The directive establishes procedures and enforcement actions for the severe violator program, including increased inspections, such as mandatory follow-up inspections of a workplace found in violation and inspections of other worksites of the same company where similar hazards or deficiencies may be present.The directive explains that the SVEP is intended to focus enforcement efforts on employers who have demonstrated recalcitrance or indifference to their OSH Act obligations by committing willful, repeated or failure-to-abate violations in one or more of the following circumstances: a fatality or catastrophe situation; in industry operations or processes that expose workers to severe occupational hazards; exposing workers to hazards related to the potential releases of highly hazardous chemicals; and all egregious enforcement actions.Visit the Severe Violator Enforcement Program directive for more details.Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees.ÌýOSHA’s role is to assure these conditions for America’s working men and women by setting and enforcing standards, and providing training, education and assistance.ÌýFor more information, visit http://www.osha.gov.

OSHA is confirming the effective date of June 15, 2010 for the direct final rule requiring employers to notify their workers of all hexavalent chromium exposures. The rule revises a provision in OSHA's Hexavalent Chromium standard that required workers be notified only when they experienced exposures exceeding the permissible exposure limit. Workers exposed to this toxic chemical are at greater risk for lung cancer and damage to the nose, throat and respiratory tract.Occupational exposures to hexavalent chromium can occur among workers handling pigments, spray paints and coatings containing chromates, operating chrome plating baths, and welding or cutting metals containing chromium, such as stainless steel. Workers breathing hexavalent chromium compounds in high concentrations over extended periods of time may risk developing lung cancer, irritation or damage to the eyes and skin.OSHA requested public comments on the revised requirement in a March 17, 2010, Direct Final Rule and accompanying Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. This was done in response to a Third Circuit Court's decision that the agency failed to explain why it departed from the proposed rule that would require notifying workers of all hexavalent chromium exposures. The Agency received no significant adverse comments, therefore it is proceeding with the Direct Final Rule and withdrawing the accompanying Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.Visit OSHA's Safety and Health Topics page on Hexavalent Chromium for more information on protecting workers from exposure to this chemical.

The Íæż½ã½ã Safety Management Training Course (SMTC) provides attendees three days of training on the basic skills needed to manage a company safety program in the construction industry.Ìý It will be held in Philadelphia, PA from September 21 - 23, 2010.The program prepares attendees to manage the key safety issues on the job site and provides techniques for delivering basic safety training to field personnel.Ìý For details, pleaseÌýclick on the following link:http://www.agc.org/cs/event_details?eventId=2199

The Advanced Safety Management Training Course (ASMTC) is a unique three-day course, which will provide a high level training experience for safety professionals and company managers who have a solid background in construction safety and health.Ìý This course will enhance a participant's ability to manage all aspects of safety and health for their employees on field safety, insurance issues and legal and liability issues.Ìý The training will be available October 18-20, 2010 in Madison, WI.Ìý For details please go to the following link:http://www.agc.org/cs/event_details?eventId=2181.

Madison, Wisconsin OSHA area director Kim Stille warned Daily Reporter that her agency is unprepared to enforce the Protecting Americas Workers Act, and that it would undermine productive relationships the agency has built with construction firms that have helped cut the construction fatality rate nearly in half over the past decade.
A new article in the September/October issue of Constructor magazine shows how collaborative safety partnerships between the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and contractors are saving lives and reducing injuries.
On September 11, OSHA renewed its Alliance with the Roadway Work Zone Safety and Health Partners, which includes Íæż½ã½ã, the American Road and Transportation Builders Association, the International Union of Operating Engineers, the Laborers International Union of North America and the National Asphalt Pavement Association.OSHA and the Roadway Work Zone Safety and Health Partners will work together to develop and disseminate case studies demonstrating how an effective safety and health program adds value to a business. They will also participate in forums, roundtable discussions and stakeholder meetings on work zone safety and health issues to forge innovative solutions to workplace hazards.For more information, contact Kevin Cannon at (703) 837-5410 or cannonk@agc.org.