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Press Release

Press Release  Massachusetts AG's Office Joins Multistate Coalition In Praising Stronger Worker Safety Rules

For immediate release:
9/06/2023
  • Office of the Attorney General
  • Office of the Attorney General
  • The Attorney General's Fair Labor Division

Media Contact   for Massachusetts AG's Office Joins Multistate Coalition In Praising Stronger Worker Safety Rules

Max German, Deputy Press Secretary

BOSTONWith the final adoption of a robust Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) rule to protect worker safety, Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell announced the resolution of a multistate federal lawsuit. The new rule, which strengthens public reporting of workplace health and safety information, will go into effect in January 2024. 

“Mandating comprehensive and detailed reporting requirements gives OSHA the ability to better address accidents and ultimately prevent them from happening," said AG Campbell. “Strong worker safety and health protections means that we have more healthy workers going home at the end of the day, more people able to return to the job tomorrow, and more families with the ability to achieve a stable economic future.”   

On-the-job injuries and illnesses remain unacceptably high, with American workers experiencing more than 3 million serious injuries and illnesses per year.

The much-anticipated final rule, which was published in the Federal Register on July 21, 2023, will improve workplace safety by encouraging employers to abate existing hazards and empowering workers to identify risks specific to their jobs and seek improvements. The rule was first proposed under the Obama Administration in 2016 but was subsequently delayed and then reversed under the Trump Administration. 

Massachusetts, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, and New York initiated a federal lawsuit in 2019 to challenge OSHA’s decision to roll back the public reporting requirements. 

During the states’ litigation, OSHA reversed its position under the Biden Administration and released a final rule similar to the one it released in 2016, making the civil case moot. As a result, the states have asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia to dismiss the case. 

The final rule provides for even greater reporting of injury and illness in high-risk industries than the initial proposal in 2016. The final rule’s detailed injury and illness reporting requirements apply to employers with 100 or more workers in designated high-risk industries whereas the requirements originally applied only to workplaces with 250 or more employees regardless of industry.

Highlights of the New Rule  

The new rule requires certain large employers – those with 100 or more employees in high-risk industries — to submit to OSHA information from two different workplace injury and illness tracking forms that employers are already required to maintain. Specifically, the rule requires these employers to annually submit a Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses (OSHA Form 300) and an Injury and Illness Report (OSHA Form 301) to OSHA. 

The forms request detailed information about workplace injuries and illnesses, such as what the injured employee was doing before the accident, how the injury occurred, what the specific injury or illness was, which part(s) of the body were affected, where in the establishment the injury occurred, the job title of the affected employee, and what object or substance directly harmed the employee. This comprehensive information about the nature and severity of workplace safety incidents and risks will help determine patterns that inform educational and compliance outreach. 

In addition, the collected information will be made available to the public electronically. Any employee-identifying information will be excluded, as will names of healthcare professionals and names and addresses of facilities where treatment was provided if treatment was administered away from the worksite. 

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Media Contact   for Massachusetts AG's Office Joins Multistate Coalition In Praising Stronger Worker Safety Rules

  • Office of the Attorney General

  • Office of the Attorney General 

    The Attorney General is the chief lawyer and law enforcement officer of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
  • The Attorney General's Fair Labor Division 

    The Attorney General’s Fair Labor Division protects workers from exploitation and sets a level playing field for employers. We enforce wage and hour, public construction, and child labor laws.
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