OSHA has quietly resumed development of an emergency response standard intended to bolster protections for first responders after pausing the process late in the Obama administration, but stakeholders are warning that the eventual rule may exclude much of the sector as it is dominated by public-sector and volunteer workers outside OSHA’s purview.
Conservative Supreme Court justices appeared to doubt OSHA’s authority to issue its COVID-19 vaccine-or-testing emergency temporary standard (ETS), with several questioning whether Congress could have foreseen situations like the current pandemic when it wrote the OSH Act, and others asking if the standard is truly necessary to fight the coronavirus.
Conservative Supreme Court justices appeared to doubt OSHA’s authority to issue its COVID-19 vaccine-or-testing emergency temporary standard (ETS), with several questioning whether Congress could have foreseen situations like the current pandemic when it wrote the OSH Act, and others asking if the standard is truly necessary to fight the coronavirus.
Conservative Supreme Court justices appeared to doubt OSHA’s authority to issue its COVID-19 vaccine-or-testing emergency temporary standard (ETS), with several questioning whether Congress could have foreseen situations like the current pandemic when it wrote the OSH Act, and others asking if the standard is truly necessary to fight the coronavirus.
Public health groups are asking a federal appeals court to resume their lawsuit over OSHA’s 2019 rollback of Obama-era electronic recordkeeping and reporting mandates, after the agency failed to propose restoring the rule by the end of 2021 as it promised in an earlier filing -- though it now says the proposal will arrive by mid-February.
Public health groups are asking a federal appeals court to resume their lawsuit over OSHA’s 2019 rollback of Obama-era electronic recordkeeping and reporting mandates, after the agency failed to propose restoring the rule by the end of 2021 as it promised in an earlier filing -- though it now says the proposal will arrive by mid-February.
Public health groups are asking a federal appeals court to resume their lawsuit over OSHA’s 2019 rollback of Obama-era electronic recordkeeping and reporting mandates, after the agency failed to propose restoring the rule by the end of 2021 as it promised in an earlier filing -- though it now says the proposal will arrive by mid-February.
State and national labor groups are asking a federal appeals court for an order that would force OSHA to reinstate its COVID-19 emergency temporary standard (ETS) for healthcare workers and quickly enact a permanent rule for the sector, teeing up what could be the first appellate decision on the agency’s ability to extend the six-month emergency regulations.
State and national labor groups are asking a federal appeals court for an order that would force OSHA to reinstate its COVID-19 emergency temporary standard (ETS) for healthcare workers and quickly enact a permanent rule for the sector, teeing up what could be the first appellate decision on the agency’s ability to extend the six-month emergency regulations.
State and national labor groups are asking a federal appeals court for an order that would force OSHA to reinstate its COVID-19 emergency temporary standard (ETS) for healthcare workers and quickly enact a permanent rule for the sector, teeing up what could be the first appellate decision on the agency’s ability to extend the six-month emergency regulations.
