OSHA's New Recordkeeping Requirements: Will You Be In Compliance on January 1st?
Webinar
Event
12.16.14
This webinar was originally presented on December 16, 2014.
On September 18, 2014 OSHA published its final rule on occupational injury and illness recordkeeping and reporting requirement to be effective January 1, 2015. The final rule on recordkeeping dramatically increased employers’ reporting requirements. In a surprise move, OSHA also announced that the information obtained from these new reporting requirements would be made public on OSHA’s web site.
Many employers think their OSHA recordkeeping logs and procedures are fully compliant, only to learn after an OSHA inspection and, in some cases, hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties, that they were not. Under OSHA’s recordkeeping regulation, covered employers are required to prepare and maintain logs for serious occupational injuries and illnesses as well fatalities, using the OSHA 300 log.
With OSHA’s expanded view of recordkeeping, particularly applicable to the use of temporary employees, every employer who is inspected by OSHA can anticipate that the inspector will review all their 300 logs for the past five years as part of any inspection.
This webinar, presented by Edwin G. Foulke, Jr., co-chair of the Workplace Safety and Catastrophe Management Practice Group at Fisher Phillips and former Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA, will examine the many recordkeeping pitfalls that employers face, especially those with multiple locations. The program will cover how to coordinate your injury and illness recordkeeping with other recordkeeping requirements and how employers can effectively use recordkeeping to improve their current safety and health management program. In addition, the webinar will examine in detail the changes made by the final rule and, in particular, the increased employer reporting requirements for all employers.
Who should attend:
HR and safety professionals, plant managers, company attorney
What you will learn:
- What events are required to be reported directly to OSHA under the new rule
- What injuries and illnesses are recordable and why
- The scope of the first aid exemption
- How to coordinate injury and illness recordkeeping requirements
- How to use recordkeeping to improve current safety and health management program
- How to analyze each injury or illness to ensure they are properly recorded
December 16, 2014
1:30 pm - 2:30 pm Eastern
Cost: Free of charge
Watch the Webinar Now
Please fill out the requested information to access the video.
Related People
-
- Edwin G. Foulke, Jr.
- Partner