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OSHA Moves Closer to Finalizing Its Electronic Recordkeeping Rule for Workplace Injuries

Boss is returning paperwork

By the end of this year, the Office of Safety and Health Administration will be making accident reports filed by employers available to the public, so employers should begin preparing for compliance now.

Back in late 2013, OSHA published a notice of proposed rulemaking for “Improve Tracking of Workplace Injuries and Illnesses” to add electronic recordkeeping requirements that would require certain employers to electronically submit to OSHA injury and illness recordkeeping information on a quarterly or annual basis. Additionally, the proposed rule sought to establish a public searchable website where OSHA would make employers’ injury and illness records available to the general public.

Fast forward to the present day (yes, we know this is completely counter-intuitive to how any government agency operates), and these are the three major provisions that are now emerging as the top contenders in the final rule to be published by January 1, 2016:

Naturally there has been strong opposition to the rule and opponents argue that accident information will be misused and misinterpreted when taken out of context, as well as have a chilling effect on voluntary reporting by employers.

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