Ihab Saad – Inspections, Citations, and Penalties
AI: Summary ©
AI: Transcript ©
Music. Hello again. Today we're going to talk about inspections,
citations and proposed penalties under the OSHA act and under OSHA
regulations, the 29 CFR 1903,
so first of all, we're going to talk about the different types of
inspections.
We have, general inspections that are scheduled, which are random
inspections scheduled by OSHA and the contractor or the site does
not know about it in advance.
There is a complete inspection. We're going to discuss it in a
little while. So if an employee, for example, complains about
something on site that can cause any hazard or danger or accidents,
they can notify OSHA, and OSHA would respond and come for
inspection
a post incident, incident inspection in case of a fatality
or three injuries from the same event, from the same accident,
OSHA has to come and inspect
and a referral news media, fire department or public if, for
example, someone driving by or passing by sees a situation on the
construction site that can cause danger to the employees, to the
workers on that construction site. They can notify OSHA directly,
whether that's a media or a just regular citizen, they can notify
OSHA and OSHA is going to respond to investigate
or a special emphasis, if there's a focus area for OSHA and OSHA
focuses that here, or that on a certain topic, or a group of
topics, like the focus for that we're going to talk about, or like
silica, for example, then OSHA is going to have a focused
inspection, or targeted inspection, to investing
investigate This particular issue.
And as I just said, the focus inspections the four main hazards,
or the focus four, which are the fall protections caught in between
electrocution and hit by or struck by,
and the last one is a follow up inspection. So in case OSHA comes
for a random inspection and they find a certain violation, they
would give an abatement time for the contractor to fix that
problem, and OSHA will come back after the end of that abatement
period to inspect whether that issue was taken care of or not.
So filing a complaint. Who can file a complaint and how should it
be filed? Any employee may file a complaint to OSHA. Anyone working
on the construction site that might be affected negatively by a
hazard, they may call OSHA or contact OSHA. The complaint goes
directly to the area director, and the area director would notify a
compliance officer to go and inspect and that complaint must be
in writing,
so would the area director respond to every complaint sent to him or
her? The answer is no. The area director may or may not take
action based on the
severity of the complaint, or the seriousness of the complainer or
the complete company,
a copy of the complaint goes to the employer so that they would
know exactly that there's a complaint that has been filed
against them. And in this case, by the way, it does not have to
include the name of the complainer, because of the
Whistleblower Act, which protects the identity of the employees on
the site for fear of retribution.
So the copy goes to the employer if an inspection takes place,
OSHA has the authority to inspect work sites. That's a general
premise, and they don't have to give an advanced notice. So most
inspection are conducted without advance notice, unless it's out of
the regular work hours, in this case, just to ensure that there's
someone on site to meet with the compliance officer or the
inspectors they would they're going to notify the site in
advance.
The exceptions to be no advanced notice rule. Are imminent danger.
In case of imminent danger again, OSHA might notify the site we're
coming immediately to investigate that inspections after hours, or,
as I said, out of regular work hours, to assure the presence of
Representatives. And when the area director believes that it's
needed. It's needed to give a notice to the site that there's
going to be an inspection.
The OSHA officers are authorized to enter the job site without
delay,
to inspect and investigate compliance to the standards, to
questions employees and.
Private and to review the records. So this is the right of the OSHA
inspector or the OSHA officer to access the construction site.
Well, can they be denied access to the construction site? The answer
is yes. Although they can come back with a subpoena, they have
the subpoena power. They can come back with a court order forcing
the contractor to allow them on site, and that's going to create
some bad blood between the contractor and OSHA, which is
definitely not advisable for any contract.
An employer can refuse to permit the compliance safety and health
officer. From now on, we're going to call it Kosho. The Kosho from
entering the job site. If this happens, the Kosho must terminate
the inspection or confine the inspection to other area. The OSHA
officer would immediately relate the situation to the OSHA area
director. And again, most likely, there's going to be a court order
allowing the Kosho to access the site, any location anywhere.
The priorities for inspection, the first priority is imminent danger
that gets the highest attention of the area director, sending someone
immediately. If they get a complaint that is an imminent
danger on site, which may result in fatalities or severe injuries,
they will respond immediately by sending a an inspector. The second
priority is investigating of investigation of fatalities and
accidents resulting in hospitalization of three or more
employees again following imminent danger. This is the second highest
priority. The third highest priority is employee complaints.
Again, as we mentioned before, the area director may respond to that
complaint or may disregard it, depending on its seriousness. So
that comes as the third priority. The fourth priority is programmed
inspections. OSHA would have a schedule of their planned
inspections in advance, so following that schedule, and then
the fifth priority is follow up inspections. As I said before,
after
fining a citation or a violation against the contractor, they would
give the employer or the contractor a an abatement period,
after which they will come back to investigate and make sure that the
mistakes were correct. I
now the inspection inspection sequence, there's a pre planning
on behalf of OSHA. So OSHA reviews the company's history of citations
to know what kind of track record do they have, and then they may
film or video from off site if they suspect something wrong is
going on on site, or if they're responding to a complaint, for
example, that's not imminent danger.
And then the third step is the compliance officer must show
credentials. So upon appearing on site, the Kosho is going to show
their identity and
announce that they're coming to investigate, or they're coming to
inspect, and what kind of inspection are they going to be
performing?
The kosher will require request entry and explain the purpose of
the visit that's upon arrival on the work site.
And then, once on the work site, the investigation, or the
inspection itself, is going to have three different steps. The
first one is going to be the opening conference. The second one
is going to be the inspection itself, or the walk around the
inspection. And finally, at the end of the inspection, there's
going to be a closing conference. We're going to talk about the
components of each one of these. So with the opening conference,
the compliance officer is going to announce what's the scope and
identify what's the scope and type of the inspection again, if it's
imminent danger, if responding to a complaint, if it's pre planned,
and so on,
and they're going to look at the records on site. So again, records
have to be kept in an accessible place where the Kosho can review
them upon visiting the site, including any records and forms
related to accidents or injuries on site. And we're going to talk
about these forms in a short while. And they are going to look
at the Material Safety Data Sheets, for example. They're going
to look at the personal protective equipment. They're going to look
at a training record for the employees on site. How many times
have they have they been trained? What kind of training have they
been receiving?
And whether it's going to be a focus inspection or not? So if
it's a focused inspection, they're going to focus primarily on fault
protection, for example, or on electrocution and so on or on. All
four focus four at the same time,
and the Kosho is going to meet with the subcontractor,
contractors and the subcontractors, with
representatives of these different entities to arrange for the next
step, which is the walk around, around the site to investigate and
to inspect.
You walk around the inspection. The kosher will tour the job
facility.
Looking for hazards, and we'd interview employees, and then
we'll collect photos and videos and samples or measurements just
to make sure. So for example, if we're talking about a certain
height for fault protection, they're going to measure they're
going to measure the guardrails and the handrails. They're going
to measure different things to make sure that they're complying
with the code.
The employer should also take photos from the same point and
from the same perspective of the compliance officer, because later
on, if they want to have a defense against a certain citation or a
penalty, they're going to prove that through the same pictures. So
it's important for the employer to take the same photo as OSHA from
several viewpoints to prove the rights
after the inspection is over, there's going to be a closing
conference the Compliance Office got to point out any potential
violations of the standards and establish abatement dates for the
correction
in case of imminent Danger, if the compliance officer concludes that
imminent danger exists, the Kosho must immediately tell the employee
and the employer of such danger, and
the immediate action may not prevent a citation from being
issued. For example,
if the sides of the excavation are not properly supported and the
Kosho feels that there might be a cave in which might cause
accidents, and that can be imminent danger if there are
people working in the trench, if they notify the employer, and the
employer takes immediate action, still, that does not negate that
they're going to be cited for their neglect of taking care of
that without being notified by the kosher so
the decision to issue a citation, the kosher is going to write the
report, and the area director is going to review the report. The
area director may consult with the regional solicitor, and then may
decide whether to issue a citation or a notice of a de minimis
violation. A de minimis violation is a violation that does not
require any penalty or any citation. It's just going to be a
warning to the contractor pay attention to that particular area
so that you do not cause any problems there.
The area director is the one who issues the citations, and not the
Kosho. So the Kosho just writes the report, and it's up to the
area director to make a decision whether to issue a citation or
not. The citations must be issued within 180 days of the visit of
the inspection. If 180 days pass, which is six months pass after the
inspection, and no citations issues is issued. That's it.
You're not going to receive a citation for that particular
complaint or issue
an informal conference. The employer can ask for an informal
conference within 15 days to
object to the citation or to appeal that citation,
the employer must either correct and pay if they acknowledge the
citation or contest the citation. Again, all of that is within the
15 days.
Types of citations, not all citations are equal. There's
something called a serious citation, which is gives a high
probability of death or serious injury. If that exists, then it's
a serious citation, and then the other than serious, which would
not cause death or serious injury.
Of the serious, the highest one is going to be the willful where
death or serious injury could occur and the employer either knew
of it or should have known that the hazard existed. So for
example, a an owner, has an employer, has employees working on
a an elevated slab, without having any fault protection, without
having any harnesses, without having the proper handrails and
guardrails and so on. Then obviously they should have known,
because this is part of the code that they have to comply with. So
this is going to be a willful violation.
Even worse than that is going to be the criminal, willful, flagrant
disregard for safety, if they intentionally expose their
employees to hazards that might result in fatality or serious
injury.
Another type of citation is for repeat violations, a re inspection
within three years, and a similar similar violation is found.
Remember when the Kosho gives the citation or issues the report and
the
area director issues the citation again. The Area Director is the
one who issues the citation, the court should just write the
violation and recommendation for that citation. They're going to
give an abatement period. If, after the abatement period, that
problem has been corrected, that's fine after the following follow up
inspection. But if within three years of that initial citation, it
is repeated, then it becomes a repeat citation and it has a
higher penalty.
This, you're showing the good faith and the good effort.
Based on history of previous violation, a reduction of 10%
shall be given to employers if they had no serious violations, no
willful violations, or no repeat violations in the past three
years. If you have any of these, you do not get any reduction in
this area,
the focused inspections are the ones that focus on four main
hazards causing 90% of all construction fatalities. That's
why they're called the focus four. The first one is falls so false
from floors, for platforms, roofs, etc, that forms up to 1/3 of all
fatalities in construction. The second one is struck by by falling
objects, by vehicles, etc. So, for example, a vehicle is backing up
and not having a siren or a warning sound. So it might hit
someone, something falling from
higher level, hitting someone standing underneath it, that's
about 22% of the fatalities caught in between, like cave ins, for
example, in case of working in a trench, that's about 18% of the
fatalities. And electrical or electro fusion, by overhead lines
or by hand tools, that's up to 17%
of the fatalities,
the purpose for a focused inspection is for the Kosho to
spend less time with safe companies and more time with other
companies. So if you are a company that has a good track record, that
has a good safety program, that is implementing that safety program,
then you're not gonna get as frequent visits from Kosho as
someone who does not have all of the above. So the focused
inspections are shorter inspections, just to make sure
that you are implementing everything that you have in your
program. To qualify for a focused inspection, you must have a
written safety program, and that should be implemented by a
competent person. Later on, we're going to discuss in detail what is
a competent person.
The focus inspection, as we mentioned, are limited.
Inspections apply only to safety. They do not have any health
issues. Apply only when there's a single controlling contractor.
We're going to talk later on about the different types of contractor
who is a controlling, who is causing, who is correcting, etc,
who is exposing, if not eligible, standard inspection is going to be
performed. So this is the focus inspection is a benefit given to
good performing employers. A 25% good faith adjustment may apply to
penalties, as we just mentioned, because already, since you're
going to have a focused inspection, you have established
that you have a good safety program and you have a competent
person to apply it, then you would qualify for the good faith
adjustment.
All right, now we're going to look very quickly at some review
questions for what we have discussed here in this lecture.
True or false, the contractor cannot refuse entry to the OSHA
compliance officer. True or false, this is false because the
contractor can refuse but it would be a big mistake
with a good safety and health program. The reduction in penalty
can be up to what percentage we mentioned two different types. One
is 25% if you have a good program and a competent person to
implement it, and 15% if you have a program that has some
deficiencies,
the penalty for a willful criminal violation can be up to how much
and who issues the citation.
So the first one again false. You can diffuse second one anywhere
between 25 and 15%
third one, up to $500,000
who issues the citation we mentioned that is going to be not
the Kosho, but the area director,
alright. So basically, this is our topic today about citations,
penalties and inspections, see you in another lecture, you.