OSHA & Workplace Safety Compliance Guide
Stay current on OSHA enforcement trends, new rulemaking, recordkeeping requirements, and state OSHA plan updates.
Overview
OSHA compliance is the foundation of workplace safety for employers across every industry. Recent years have seen heightened enforcement activity, significant proposed rulemaking (heat illness prevention, workplace violence, emergency response), and increased penalties through annual inflation adjustments. Employers in State Plan states face additional complexity as state agencies adopt stricter or broader standards than federal OSHA. Multi-state employers must track both federal OSHA standards and the variations imposed by the 22 states and territories with OSHA-approved plans.
Regulatory Landscape
Federal OSHA continues to prioritize enforcement through National Emphasis Programs (NEPs) targeting heat hazards, falls in construction, trenching/excavation, and COVID-19. Penalty amounts were significantly increased through inflation adjustments — willful violations now exceed $160,000 per instance. The proposed Heat Injury and Illness Prevention Standard would be the first federal heat-specific rule, requiring written plans, water and shade access, acclimatization protocols, and emergency response procedures. Meanwhile, OSHA's electronic recordkeeping rule now requires establishments with 100+ employees in high-hazard industries to submit full OSHA 300/301 logs (not just 300A summaries). State Plans like Cal/OSHA, Oregon OSHA, and Washington L&I frequently adopt standards that exceed federal requirements.
Key Considerations
- 1Maintain current OSHA 300 logs and submit electronic records by the March 2 annual deadline
- 2Implement written heat illness prevention plans even before the proposed federal standard is finalized
- 3Conduct annual OSHA compliance audits focusing on the General Duty Clause and applicable NEPs
- 4Track State Plan variations if operating in states with OSHA-approved plans
- 5Budget for increased penalty exposure — maximum penalties now exceed $160,000 per willful violation
- 6Ensure all required safety data sheets (SDS) are current and accessible under the Hazard Communication Standard
Recent OSHA & Safety Updates
Recent Regulatory Updates
Latest compliance changes affecting workplace health programs
OSHA Cites Florida Roofing Company for Willful Fall Protection Violations After Fatal Two-Story Fall
OSHA cited a Fort Lauderdale-area roofing employer for willfully exposing workers to fall hazards after one employee suffered fatal injuries and another was seriously injured falling from a two-story residence. Citations include failure to provide required fall protection systems, training, and safe access — recurring hazards in residential roofing that OSHA continues to prioritize under its Fall Protection Stand-Down focus.
OSHA Local Emphasis Program for Maritime Industries — Puerto Rico and US Virgin Islands (NYC-CPL-04-00-002)
OSHA Region 2 issued a Local Emphasis Program directing increased inspections and outreach for maritime industries in Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands following heightened workplace safety concerns. The LEP targets shipyard, marine terminal, and longshoring employers, and complements existing federal maritime standards (29 CFR Parts 1915, 1917, and 1918). Employers in covered industries should expect programmed inspections.
OSHA Cites Alabama Home Builder With 8 Serious Violations After Fatal Trenching Incident
OSHA cited a Huntsville-based home builder with 8 serious safety violations following a December 2025 worker fatality, finding the employer exposed construction workers to multiple trenching and excavation hazards during groundwork preparation. Violations include inadequate cave-in protection, unsafe access/egress, and failure to inspect excavations — among the most frequently cited fatality drivers in residential construction.
OSHA Updates National Emphasis Program on Indoor and Outdoor Heat-Related Hazards (CPL 03-00-024)
OSHA revised its National Emphasis Program targeting heat-related workplace hazards, using 2022–2025 injury data to prioritize inspections across 55 high-risk industries. The update introduces reorganized appendices for evaluating heat programs and citation guidance, removes outdated numerical inspection goals, and directs compliance officers to conduct random inspections in high-risk industries on days when the National Weather Service issues heat advisories or warnings. Effective immediately for five years.
OSHA Cites Massachusetts Contractor $4.6M After Fatal Trench Cave-In — 7 Willful, 33 Repeat Violations
OSHA cited Revoli Construction Co. Inc. with 7 willful, 33 repeat, and 17 serious violations after a November 2025 trench collapse at a Yarmouth worksite killed one worker and seriously injured another. Violations include failure to provide safe trench exit, lack of cave-in protection, unsupported underground utilities, damaged protective systems, and electrical and fall hazards. Proposed penalties total $4,699,362.
OSHA Cites Georgia Stone Product Manufacturers for Repeat Respirable Crystalline Silica Violations
OSHA cited two Cartersville, Georgia stone product manufacturers — Stone Atlanta Countertops Inc. and GT Stone Granite LLC — for repeat violations related to respirable crystalline silica exposure after a follow-up inspection found they failed to address previously identified hazards. Violations include failure to develop written exposure control plans, respiratory protection programs, and hazard communication programs. Combined penalties total $116,306.
OSHA Cares Initiative — Expanded Compliance Assistance for Employers
OSHA launched the OSHA Cares initiative, an agency-wide effort to help businesses meet workplace safety requirements through increased access to compliance assistance specialists, improved educational materials, and real-time assistance during enforcement visits. The initiative includes a standardized training program for Compliance Safety and Health Officers and updated employer workplace posters with a modernized design.
OSHA Launches Safety Champions Program — Tiered Cooperative Compliance Initiative
OSHA launched the Safety Champions Program, a three-tier cooperative initiative (Introductory, Intermediate, Advanced) designed to help employers develop effective safety and health programs. The program emphasizes seven core elements: management leadership, worker participation, hazard identification, prevention and control, education and training, program evaluation, and communication. Participants can work independently or with Special Government Employees for technical assistance.
OSHA Hazard Communication Standard — Compliance Date Extension to May 19, 2026 (29 CFR 1910.1200)
OSHA extended compliance dates for the updated Hazard Communication Standard (HCS) by four months owing to the complexity of the transition to GHS Revision 7. Employers now have until May 19, 2026, to update safety data sheets and labels under Section 1910.1200(j)(2)(i), with subsequent compliance milestones similarly extended. The extension applies to all employers covered by the HCS across general industry, construction, and maritime.
Roofing Company Cited for Fall Protection Violations
OSHA cited a Texas roofing contractor $312,000 for willful fall protection violations after workers were exposed to fall hazards of up to 25 feet. Case demonstrates OSHA enforcement priorities in construction.
States Tracking OSHA & Safety
26 states currently monitor osha & safety regulations
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Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about osha & safety compliance
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