Safety is the law: Occupational safety compliance

Dale Sanders (sandersdl@alma.edu) is a professor at Alma College in Alma, Michigan and Director of the Health Care Administration program. Tom Ealey (ealey@alma.edu) is a professor at Alma College in Alma, Michigan, and has decades of experience in healthcare consulting and administration, including regulatory compliance and risk management.

Prior to 1970, workplace safety was somewhat ad hoc — employers responded to state regulations, workers compensation costs, liability concerns, and contract language. In 1970, the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act or the Act) was passed and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)[1] was created.[2]

The Act allows a state agency to supersede OSHA if the state agency has regulations more stringent than OSHA.[3] Employers should be aware of which agency is the authorized enforcement agency and the details of the regulations.

For editorial purposes we will refer to OSHA and OSHA regulations. The first step for the organization is to determine which agency enforces safety practices in your state. We will focus on the federal regulations, but each organization should build a reference collection of applicable federal and/or state regulations.

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