Protecting America's Workers Act Is Reintroduced in the Senate

On Wednesday, Sen. Edward Kennedy reintroduced the Protecting America’s Workers Act of 2009 (PAWA) (S. 1580), a bill that would amend the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act by expanding its coverage, increasing whistleblower protections, and enhancing employer penalties for violations. Sen. Kennedy had introduced this bill twice before, with then-Senator Obama acting as a co-sponsor in 2007. In April of this year, Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA) introduced a companion bill (H.R. 2067) in the House of Representatives.

Highlights of the current bill include the following:

  • Increased civil penalties for OSH Act violations
  • Removal of the requirement that a workplace death must occur before criminal penalties can attach
  • Provision of felony charges for repeat and willful violations that result in a worker’s death or serious injury
  • Expansion of OSH Act coverage to include airline and railroad employees, as well as Department of Energy contractors
  • Creation of regulations that give workers the right to refuse to do hazardous work
  • Requirement that OSHA investigate all cases of death and serious injuries

The Senate version of PAWA has been referred to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
 

House and Senate Committee Hearings Focus on Workplace Safety Issues

On April 28, both the House and Senate conducted hearings to address the adequacy of employer incentives for maintaining safe workplaces and penalties for violating Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) laws. Lawmakers in both chambers stressed the need for OSH reform.

The House Committee on Education and Labor’s hearing examined whether the Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA) laws ensure that employers who fail to protect their workers are adequately penalized and deterred from committing future violations. Claiming that penalties against employers who commit OSH Act violations are “shockingly low,” Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif), Chair of the House Education and Labor Committee's Subcommittee on Workforce Protections, testified that the bill she introduced last week – the Protecting America’s Workers Act (PAWA) – would provide necessary OSH Act reform, including increased civil and criminal penalties for employers. A video of her testimony can be found here.

Other speakers and their testimony can be found here.

Similarly, during the hearing held by the Senate Employment and Workplace Safety Subcommittee, Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash) claimed that current workplace safety laws rely too heavily on voluntary employer compliance and “watered down” penalties. According to Murray, OSHA has not lived up to its mission. She claimed that a new administration and Congress can “revisit” the OSH Act and the agency responsible for administering it.

Warren K. Brown, President of the American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE), however, testified that while some changes to the Act are needed, wholesale changes could “diminish OSHA’s capability to be this nation’s leader in occupational safety and health.” Brown suggested that since the vast majority of employers implement safety programs and abide by them, OSHA should “direct its enforcement resources where the greatest gains in safety can be achieved – towards those employers with a history of flagrantly ignoring their compliance responsibilities.”

A complete list of the senate hearing panelists and their testimony can be found here.

Protecting America's Workers Act is Reintroduced

A bill seeking to amend the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Act by expanding its coverage, increasing whistleblower protections, and enhancing employer penalties for violations was reintroduced last week. Drafted by Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif) and co-sponsored by 16 others, the Protecting America’s Workers Act (PAWA) (H.R. 2067) had been introduced in both the 109th and 110th Congresses without success. President Obama had been a co-sponsor of a previous version. The most recent version of PAWA contains even stiffer penalties than those proposed in the earlier versions. Recent workplace safety violations have focused attention on PAWA, so this bill could have more success this session. In fact, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis has recently stated that enforcing worker safety and health regulations would be one of her top priorities.

In essence, PAWA would amend several provisions of the OSH Act as it relates to government and private employers. Notably, PAWA would increase the civil penalties under the OSH Act. For example, the minimum civil penalty for willful violations would increase from $5,000 to $8,000, and the maximum penalty would increase from $70,000 to $120,000. For serious violations, the maximum penalty is increased from $7,000 to $12,000. The legislation would also create a new penalty structure that would range from a minimum of $50,000 ($25,000 for small employers) to a maximum of $250,000 for a worker’s death caused by a willful violation. A death caused by a serious violation would result in a penalty ranging from $20,000 ($10,000 for small employers) to $50,000. In addition, PAWA would remove the requirement that a workplace death must occur before criminal penalties can attach, as well as providing for felony charges as a result of an employer’s repeated and willful violations which result in a worker’s death or serious injury. Criminal penalties would increase from a minimum of six months in prison to 10 years for a first offense and from a maximum of one year to a maximum of 20 years for repeat offenses. If a willful violation causes serious bodily injury but does not cause death, criminal penalties may include imprisonment for up to 5 years for a first offense, and 10 years for a repeat violation.

In addition, according to a press release issued by co-sponsor and Chairman of the House Committee on Education and Labor George Miller (D-Calif), PAWA would also accomplish the following:

  • Expand OSH coverage to airline and railroad employees, as well as Department of Energy contractors
  • Require OSHA to investigate all cases of death and serious injuries (i.e. incidents that result in the hospitalization of 2 or more employees)
  • Improve whistleblower protections
  • Create regulations that give workers the right to refuse to do hazardous work
  • Clarify that employees cannot be discriminated against for reporting injuries, illnesses or unsafe conditions, and bring the procedures for investigating and adjudicating discrimination complaints into line with other safety and health and whistleblower laws
  • Provide workers and employee representatives the right to contest OSHA’s failure to issue citations, classification of its citations, and proposed penalties.
  • Give injured workers, their families and families of workers who died in work-related incidents the right to meet with investigators, receive copies of citations, and to have an opportunity to make a statement before any settlement negotiations
  • Clarify that the time spent by an employee accompanying an OSHA inspector during an investigation is considered time worked, for which a worker must be compensated
  • Prohibit OSHA from designating a citation as an “unclassified citation” where an employer can avoid the potential consequences of a “willful” violation, the most serious violation
  • Allow any worker or their representative to object to a modification or withdrawal of a citation, and entitle them to a hearing before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission

PAWA has been referred to the House Committee on Education and Labor. Many employers are already facing increased scrutiny under the new Administration, and passage of the PAWA could have a significant effect on their operations. Our governmental affairs team will continue to keep you updated.
 

Potential Workplace Safety Laws Aim to Place Increased Burdens on Employers

Workplace safety has been touted as a top priority for the Obama Administration. Increased safety measures, however, often come at a high price for employers. A number of failed bills introduced during the Bush Administration will likely get a second viewing by the 111th Congress. These measures include:

  • Protecting America’s Workers Act (PAWA) (H.R. 2049, S. 1244). This Act amends the Occupational Safety and Health Act (“OSH Act”) by, among other things, increasing civil and criminal penalties for employer violations, lowering the threshold for holding an employer criminally responsible for an employee’s death, and providing for felony charges for an employer’s repeated and willful violations that result in a worker’s death or serious injury. Additionally, revised regulations would likely require employers to go even beyond their current obligations, and shoulder the entire financial burden in providing personal protective equipment (PPE) to employees.
  • Worker Protection Against Combustible Dust Explosions and Fires Act of 2008 (CDEFA) (H.R. 5522). This act would mandate a final rule regulating combustible dusts in the workplace, and would apply to manufacturing, processing, blending, conveying, repackaging, and handling of combustible particulate solids and their dusts. CDEFA would not apply to processes already covered by OSHA’s standard on grain facilities. This law would impact a broad spectrum of industries that manufacture, process, or otherwise handle materials that produce combustible dusts, requiring them to implement dust assessment, control, and employee safety training programs, among other obligations. Because the rules that would accompany this act have not been established, it is not yet clear how much this will cost the private sector. To the extent CDEFA does not overlap with preexisting rules and standards, it could be very costly to employers not in compliance with the final rule.
  • Nurse and Patient Safety Protection Act of 2007 (H.R. 378). This act would have directed OSHA to issue new ergonomics regulations for the health care industry. This bill was in response to President Bush’s repeal of the highly controversial ergonomics regulations issued by OSHA during the Clinton Administration. Under the Congressional Review Act, Congress was able to rescind the regulations, and OSHA is not permitted to issue new ones without Congressional approval. Since any new ergonomics regulations must go through the legislative process, business interests will have the opportunity to voice opposition to bills such as the Nurse and Patent Safety Protection Act, which will likely emerge during the Obama Administration.

These and other safety–related measures will be closely followed