• About WordPress
    • WordPress.org
    • Documentation
    • Learn WordPress
    • Support
    • Feedback
  • Log In
  • Personnel
    • Professional Safety Staffing
    • Safety Recruiting
    • Careers with FDRsafety
  • Expert Witness
    • Jim Stanley
    • Steve Hawkins
    • Expert Witness Services
  • Compliance
    • Risk Assessments
    • Industrial Hygiene
    • Fall Protection Safety Services
    • Forklift Safety Services
    • Machine Guarding Safety Services
    • Combustible Dust Compliance
    • Confined Space Safety
  • Safety Training
    • Safety Awareness
    • Instructor-led courses
    • Training Case Study
  • About
    • Our Mission and Values
    • Our Leaders
    • FDRsafety Senior Advisors
    • Safety Solutions Blog
    • Safety Terms Glossary
  • Careers
  • Contact
    FDRsafety
    • Personnel
      • Professional Safety Staffing
      • Safety Recruiting
      • Careers with FDRsafety
    • Expert Witness
      • Jim Stanley
      • Steve Hawkins
      • Expert Witness Services
    • Compliance
      • Risk Assessments
      • Industrial Hygiene
      • Fall Protection Safety Services
      • Forklift Safety Services
      • Machine Guarding Safety Services
      • Combustible Dust Compliance
      • Confined Space Safety
    • Safety Training
      • Safety Awareness
      • Instructor-led courses
      • Training Case Study
    • About
      • Our Mission and Values
      • Our Leaders
      • FDRsafety Senior Advisors
      • Safety Solutions Blog
      • Safety Terms Glossary
    • Careers
    • Contact

Enforcement

December 2014 newsletter

  • Posted by FDRsafety
  • Categories Enforcement, FDRsafety newsletter
  • Date December 4, 2014
  • What to do when an OSHA citation arrives: step by step
  • FDRsafety now provides Safety Program Management

Join Our Mailing List

What to do when an OSHA citation arrives: step by step

By Jim Stanley
President, FDRsafety

Despite your best efforts to operate a safe workplace, the bad news has arrived: OSHA has issued a citation to your company. If you are like many organizations, you may be uncertain what to do next. Here is a step-by-step guide.

  • First, be aware you have 15 working days from receipt of a citation to begin formally contesting it. During those 15 days, you may go to your local OSHA office to request an informal settlement conference, during which you can often achieve a reduction in the assessed penalty or a modification of the abatement date, or even a withdrawal or reclassification of the alleged violation. Settlements can also be reached after the formal appeals process begins. It is important to note, however that if you miss the deadline to start a formal appeal, the citation becomes a final order.
  • Before engaging with OSHA, it is important to know where you stand:
    • Conduct your own fact-finding. Make sure the allegations made in the citation are correct.
    • Review the OSHA regulations cited in each violation. Check to see whether the facts of the situation correctly match the regulation alleged to have been violated.
    • Determine whether any employees were actually exposed to the alleged hazard. Without actual exposure, the alleged violation may not hold up.
    • Determine whether anyone in your company knew of the alleged hazard in advance or could have known through the use of reasonable diligence. If no one knew, OSHA may have a problem making the case to cite you for a serious violation.
  • Review this information and determine whether you want to contest the alleged violation. Appeals begin by filing a “Notice of Contest” with the OSHA area director. You may appeal the violation itself, its classification, the proposed penalty or the abatement deadline, or all of these. Filing the Notice of Contest puts a hold on the abatement deadline until the matter is settled or the Review Commission or a court issues a final order upholding the citation.
  • If you start the formal review process, engage with the Solicitor’s Office at the U.S. Department of Labor to see if you can arrive at a negotiated settlement. (Do you need an OSHA lawyer? Well, you can represent yourself, but if you do, you’ll have a fool for a client.)
  • If no negotiated settlement can be reached, the next step is a proceeding with a hearing officer, which usually takes place within 9 to 12 months. Any appeal from the hearing officer goes to the three-member OSHA Review Commission. From there, further appeals are made to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

One question that companies frequently raise as they move through the process is whether they should go ahead with abatement for the alleged violations. My advice is to correct any hazard in your workplace that may expose employees to harm. If no such hazard exists, my advice is to wait until the contest is resolved.

Jim Stanley is a former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA. Contact him at jstanley@fdrsafety.com or 513-317-5644.


 

FDRsafety now provides Safety Program Management

Improve the quality of your organization’s safety program and save money by engaging the Safety Program Management services of FDRsafety. Our programs are custom-designed to fit your unique business needs and manage your safety program effectively. FDRsafety is pleased to announce a new service to assist in the management of your safety program.Our services include:

  • Improved quality: FDRsafety has wide-ranging expertise in all aspects of occupational safety and health, and experience in a wide range of industries. We provide highly qualified professionals to effectively manage any type of safety program, starting with initial employee screening and orientation processes.
  • Increased efficiency: We assess the level of resources required to provide a safe workplace and custom-design a program to provide those resources. Utilizing our Safety Program Management services is a cost-effective way to avoid OSHA fines, as well as keeping your organization’s workers’ compensation and human resources costs at a minimum.
  • Technical and consulting support
  • Accident investigation
  • Reporting and recordkeeping
  • Training and safety meetings
  • Vendor assistance
  • Employee interaction
  • Regulatory assistance
  • Workers Compensation support
  • Fit for duty support

For more information visit Safety Program Management.

 

  • Share:
FDRsafety

Previous post

OSHA looking to expand powers over recordkeeping
December 4, 2014

Next post

OSHA inspections involving temporary workers up substantially
December 8, 2014

You may also like

Amputations in Manufacturing – A New OSHA National Emphasis Program
16 January, 2020

On December 10, 2019 OSHA published CPL 03-00-022, National Emphasis Program on Amputations in Manufacturing Industries. This Instruction supersedes OSHA Instruction CPL 03-00-019, National Emphasis Program on Amputations that was published in August of 2015. This updated Instruction: • Revises …

Drone Inspections: OSHA’s New Flying Watch Dog
23 January, 2019

We are in the midst of a technological revolution. No matter the job, technology continues to find its way into every corner of every industry, including construction. Heading into 2019, one of the most interesting (and concerning to some) technology …

Are You Ready For An OSHA Inspection?
16 July, 2018

This blog is targeting small employers, especially those involved with sheet metal fabrication. Of necessity, your work involves workers being close to the point of operation for many tasks. Spot welders, riveters, manual forming machines, etc. are all operations that …

Search

Categories

  • Accident Prevention
  • Articles
  • CSA
  • Enforcement
  • FDRsafety newsletter
  • Legislation
  • News and Announcements
  • OSHA
  • Recordkeeping
  • Research
  • Risk Assessments
  • Safety and sustainability
  • Temporary Safety Professionals / Recruiting
  • Training
  • Transportation safety
  • Uncategorized

Latest Posts

Additional Thoughts On Reevaluating OSHA
06Mar2025
Feasibility For Machine Guarding Is A Big Deal For Employers and Employees
13May2024
Online Powered Industrial Truck Operator Certification Problems
25Aug2023

Get In Touch

Contact

360 Cool Springs Boulevard,
Suite 101,
Franklin, TN 37067

1-888-755-8010

info@fdrsafety.com

Careers

Accreditations

Contact Us

Powered by WordPress.