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OSHA clarifies its jurisdiction over two State Plans

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Washington — OSHA has published information clarifying its jurisdiction related to State Plan programs in Puerto Rico and Maryland.

In a notice published April 24, OSHA announces the revision of the Puerto Rico State Plan’s operational status agreement, or OSA, initially signed in 1981. The process for the change began with an April 4 letter to OSHA from Puerto Rico’s Assistant Secretary of Labor Nelvin Rodriguez-Sanchez.

In his letter, Rodriguez-Sanchez wrote that PR OSHA lacks the resources to investigate private-sector employees performing work in the following circumstances:

“Under the existing OSA, federal OSHA only had coverage of enforcement related to contractors or subcontractors on federal establishments when the State Plan could not obtain entry, and federal OSHA did not have coverage over marine construction conducted by private-sector employers,” the agency says.

During a review of the OSA, federal OSHA determined that other clarifications and revisions were required. Among them:

The new OSA features a provision stating that federal OSHA “can exercise its authority to inspect and take appropriate enforcement action at an entire project or facility where federal and State Plan authorities both have enforcement authority in the interest of administrative practicability.”

Likewise, in another notice published April 27 regarding the Maryland State Plan program, OSHA says it has jurisdiction over private-sector employees:

“Both Maryland OSHA and federal OSHA believe this is the best way to ensure prompt and effective protection of such private-sector workers,” the notice states.


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Original article published by Safety+Health an NSC publication

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