The White House has completed review of a draft final rule that will remove or revise duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent safety and health standards though the measure is not expected to include an Obama-era plan to expand when OSHA’s safety standard applies to power equipment that is shut off for repairs.
OSHA is promising to carefully scrutinize and document its decision-making before issuing regulatory guidance in response to a report from the Labor Department's Inspector General (IG) that found the Obama administration did not establish adequate steps for distributing regulatory guidance, opening the agency up to legal challenges.
OSHA is considering grandfathering older trucks from any new standards it may develop as it works to update its long-time industrial truck safety rules, an approach the agency says it is considering as it works to limit any potential new costs to employers.
The Justice Department (DOJ) is asking the Supreme Court to retain a limited form of judicial deference for OSHA and other agencies’ interpretations of their rules rather than scrapping the doctrine altogether as conservatives, industry groups and others have urged, warning that deference is needed to ensure “certainty and stability” for nationwide rules.
House Democrats are planning to quickly advance legislation setting deadlines for OSHA to craft a standard addressing workplace violence in the healthcare sector, but the legislation is facing stiff opposition from Republicans, suggesting that pending companion legislation in the Senate is unlikely to advance.
Cal/OSHA officials are planning to convene an advisory committee this spring to provide advice on ways to permanently preserve the goals of the Obama administration's reporting and recordkeeping rule after determining that the Trump administration's rollback, which takes effect later this month, “substantially diminished” the requirements.
Construction and other industry groups are welcoming OSHA's recent announcement that it will delay for 60 days enforcing documentation requirements for its new crane operator certification regulation, though some groups had urged the agency to provide a much longer period.
The Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) is urging the Trump administration to ensure that EPA’s final rule banning use of methylene chloride in paint strippers protects workers by covering most commercial uses, fearing that the agency is likely to rely on a proposed training program in lieu of a comprehensive ban on the substance’s paint-stripping uses.
Labor groups are petitioning the Trump administration to retract a proposed Labor Department (DOL) rule easing child labor safety laws in the health sector because it violates the Information Quality Act (IQA), a little-used law that courts have found to be unenforceable, though advocates say the petition could bolster a future suit under other laws.
The Labor Department’s (DOL) Office of Inspector General (OIG) has agreed to review DOL’s proposed rule allowing teenage healthcare workers to independently operate patient lifts as part of a broader investigation into the agency’s rulemaking processes, following a letter from Democratic lawmakers faulting the Trump administration’s rule.
