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Summary of Changes for 1910 General Industry - January 2020 Edition
 
January 15, 2020 (Federal Register Volume 85, Nº 10) [RIN 1290-AA38]

§1903.15 The U.S. Department of Labor (Department) adjusted for inflation the civil monetary penalties assessed or enforced by the Department, pursuant to the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 as amended by the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvements Act of 2015 (Inflation Adjustment Act).

 
December 17, 2019 (Federal Register Volume 84, Nº 242)

§§1910.23, 1910.25, 1910.27, 1910.29, 1910.140 and 1910.269 OSHA issued corrections to the Walking-Working Surfaces, Personal Protective Equipment, and Special Industries standards.

 
September 26, 2019 (Federal Register Volume 84, Nº 187) [RIN 1218-AC94]

Appendix A to §1910.134 OSHA approved two additional quantitative fit testing protocols for inclusion in appendix A of the Respiratory Protection Standard. These protocols are: The modified ambient aerosol condensation nuclei counter (CNC) quantitative fit testing protocol for full-facepiece and half-mask elastomeric respirators and the modified ambient aerosol CNC quantitative fit testing protocol for filtering facepiece respirators. The protocols apply to employers in general industry, shipyard employment, and the construction industry. Both protocols are abbreviated variations of the original OSHA-approved ambient aerosol CNC quantitative fit testing protocol (often referred to as the PortaCount® protocol), but differ from the test by the exercise sets, exercise duration, and sampling sequence. These protocols will serve as alternatives to the four existing quantitative fit testing protocols already listed in appendix A of the Respiratory Protection Standard and will maintain safety and health protections for workers while providing additional flexibility and reducing compliance burdens.

 
July 15, 2019 (Federal Register Volume 84, Nº 93) [RIN 1218-AC67]

§§1904.10, 1910.6, 1910.120, 1910.1001, 1910.1017, 1910.1018, 1910.1025, 1910.1026, 1910.1027, 1910.1028, 1910.1029, 1910.1030, 1910.1043, 1910.1044, 1910.1045, 1910.1047, 1910.1048, 1910.1050, 1910.1051, 1910.1052, 1910.1053, and 1910.120 In response to the President's Executive Order 13563, "Improving Regulations and Regulatory Review," and consistent with Executive Order 13777, "Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda," OSHA removed or revised outdated, duplicative, unnecessary, and inconsistent requirements in its safety and health standards. The current review, the fourth in this ongoing effort, the Standards Improvement Project-Phase IV (SIP-IV), reduced regulatory burden while maintaining or enhancing worker safety and health, and improving privacy protections.

 
April 15, 2019 (Federal Register Volume 84, Nº 72)

§§1910.119 and 1910.184 OSHA issued technical amendments for minor corrections to the Process Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals and Slings standards.

 
February 25, 2019 (Federal Register Volume 84, Nº 17) [RIN 1218-AD17]

§1904.41 To protect worker privacy, OSHA amended the recordkeeping regulation by rescinding the requirement for establishments with 250 or more employees to electronically submit information from OSHA Forms 300 and 301. These establishments will continue to be required to maintain those records on-site, and OSHA will continue to obtain them as needed through inspections and enforcement actions. In addition to reporting required after severe injuries, establishments will continue to submit information from their Form 300A. Such submissions provide OSHA with ample data that it will continue seeking to fully utilize. In addition, OSHA amended the recordkeeping regulation to require covered employers to submit their Employer Identification Number (EIN) electronically along with their injury and illness data submission, which will facilitate use of the data and may help reduce duplicative employer reporting. Nothing in the final rule revokes an employer's duty to maintain OSHA Forms 300 and 301 for OSHA inspection. These actions together will allow OSHA to improve enforcement targeting and compliance assistance, decrease burden on employers, and protect worker privacy and safety.

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