The
National Grain and Feed Association (NGFA) is concerned that an
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) notice of proposed
rulemaking "does little to achieve its stated goal of reducing injuries,
illnesses and fatalities."
In a recently submitted statement,
the NGFA asks OSHA to withdraw its proposed rule to track workplace
injuries and illnesses. According to the letter, "the current
injury-and-illness reporting requirements have worked well and proven
themselves as balanced and useful in protecting lives and reducing
injury levels."
The
proposed rule would require employers to electronically submit to OSHA
injury-and- illness information currently contained in forms 300A, 300
and 301. Under the OSHA proposal, each establishment with 250 or more
employees would be required to report on a quarterly basis, and
establishments with 20 or more employees in certain designated
industries would be required to report annually. The agency also would
have discretion under the proposal to require any employer to submit
more detailed information about specific injuries and illnesses.
In its statement, NGFA outlines the following concerns:
Reliability:
As currently proposed, the rule would allow OSHA to obtain and release
to the public detailed information regarding specific workplace injuries
and illnesses, including the company, location and incident-specific
data. OSHA states that the change would give employees, potential
employees, consumers, labor organizations and businesses, and other
members of the public important information about companies' workplace
safety records. However, NGFA states, "OSHA under its proposal would
provide such data without any meaningful context. As a result, the data
and information made public may well not be a reliable measure of an
employer's safety record or its efforts to promote a safe work
environment."
- Privacy: The proposed rule would require
employers to submit confidential details about the company and
information about its employees, which many consider proprietary
business information. In issuing its proposal, according to NGFA's
letter, "OSHA ignores several court rulings that have found employers
have a privacy interest in maintaining the confidentiality of such data
and business information, and fails to consider the implications of
publishing it." For example, OSHA states it intends to publish the
addresses of certain businesses that produce, store or maintain highly
sensitive, hazardous or valuable products or commodities. Depending upon
the nature of the business, publicizing locations and number of
employees could leave a business vulnerable to threats to security.
- No-Fault: The proposed rule abandons OSHA's "no-fault" approach to recording keeping without justification or analysis.
- Disincentives:
Under existing rules, OSHA encourages employers to record all possible
qualifying incidents, and provides that if an incident is later found to
be outside the reporting requirements, it can be stricken. This
protection may well have resulted in employers erring on the side of
"over-reporting" of injury and illness incidents with the assurance that
they could be corrected later, NGFA says. However, the proposed rule
potentially would give employers an incentive not to record those
incidents, and "paradoxically, the outcome would be less - not more -
information on workplace injuries."
- Access: Under the proposed rule, OSHA would require all records be submitted electronically. However, OSHA has not tested or verified its assumption that only a small portion of businesses do not have immediate access to computers or the internet. This verification is required under the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996.
Files (Photo credit: T a k) |
- Time and cost: NGFA says OSHA has grossly
underestimated the costs of compliance, estimating it to be only $183
per year for establishments with 250 or more employees, and only $9 per
year for establishments with 20 or more employees in specified
industries. However, NGFA says, the agency fails to account for numerous
costs associated with the proposed rule, including, but not limited
to:
- Possible cost of adopting a new system to accommodate OSHA's filing system; and
- Training for a new system and implementation of electronic systems for businesses only using paper format, which is representative of most grain, feed and processing businesses.
Further,
according to NGFA's statement, "OSHA provides no data, surveys or
objective support for its assertions of the benefits that allegedly will
flow from the proposed regulation. The agency's claims are mere
speculation and conjecture that these benefits will emerge.
Simultaneously, the agency ignores entirely the various negative
consequences that are sure to occur.
"For
all these reasons, the NGFA believes OSHA's proposed rule will fail to
enhance workplace safety and instead will have the effect of driving up
costs for grain, feed and processing businesses, and pose a risk to
increasing unemployment," the statement concludes.
For additional information, see NGFA's statement.
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