OSHA to take a harder look at certain industries and companies with low workplace injury rates

OSHA, responsible for enforcing worker safety regulations, will be doing more to ensure that companies are following those laws and accurately reporting workplace accidents and injuries.

The agency will be focusing on specific industries, where certain injuries are common, and also will be examining whether some companies have been lax in reporting injuries, according to an article in the DemocratandChronicle.com

The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, created to enforce the large and growing number of worker safety laws and regulations, last week issued its "site-specific target" plan for the year, a warning, in effect, that the agency will be tougher on injury rates in specialized industries.

The plan mentioned nursing homes, where workers often suffer back and limb injuries in caring for patients, as an industry facing special attention.

But there is another program in the bureaucratic works — the National Emphasis Program — that is potentially more significant for local businesses that to this point either have escaped OSHA attention or are not in the usual range of targeted industries.

OSHA plans to examine companies that report low injury rates or few lost days due to injury with the idea that many companies have been underreporting or minimizing the need for thorough record-keeping.

The agency estimates that as many as 20 percent of all businesses fail to adequately report workplace-related injuries and illnesses. Other studies put the number as high as 68 percent.

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