Do You Understand OSHA’s Multi-Employer Citation Policy?

Framing News,

Originally Published by: Safety and Health Magazine — October 23, 2022
SBCA appreciates your input; please email us if you have any comments or corrections to this article.

The impetus for OSHA’s Multi-Employer Citation Policy in the 1990s? To prevent employers who had workers at the same jobsite from pointing fingers at each other when inspectors found hazards or investigated incidents. That’s how former OSHA Deputy Assistant Secretary Richard Fairfax describes it.

Key points
  • The policy outlines four types of employers: creating, exposing, correcting and controlling.
  • OSHA follows a two-step process in its policy and takes “reasonable care” on the part of the employer(s) into account.
  • The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld OSHA’s multi-employer policy in November 2018, becoming the eighth circuit court to do so.

Fairfax

“The person with employees exposed to hazards would say, ‘I didn’t make that hazard. I have no control over it or correcting it. So you can’t cite me, you’ve got to cite this person,’” Fairfax recalls. “Then they would go to the one who created the hazard and that person would say, ‘Look, I was just given orders to dig this trench. And I don’t have any employees exposed.’

“It was just a mess.”

Although the policy officially began in 1999, it was informally instituted five years earlier as part of the Field Inspection Reference Manual, said Fairfax, now a principal consultant for NSC Networks – part of the Workplace Practice Area at the National Safety Council.

That informal policy, however, wasn’t clear and caused confusion.

That’s when OSHA started work on its current multi-employer policy, which has remained in place for more than two decades despite numerous court challenges.

Types of employers

In its policy, OSHA outlines four types of employers: creating, exposing, correcting and controlling. The agency defines those employers and provides examples:

CREATING – The employer who caused the hazardous condition that violates an OSHA standard

For example, a host employer who failed to cover drums containing hazardous chemicals, which caused workers (their own/those of other employers) to be exposed to an air contaminant above the permissible exposure limit.

EXPOSING – An employer whose employees are exposed to the hazards

Another employer has created an unsafe trench but the exposing employer is allowing its workers to perform tasks in or around that same trench.

CORRECTING – An employer “engaged in a common undertaking, on the same worksite, as the exposing employer,” and one who’s responsible for correcting a hazard.

“This usually occurs where an employer is given the responsibility of installing and/or maintaining particular safety/health equipment or devices,” OSHA says.

For example, an employer who’s tasked with installing, erecting or maintaining fall protection measures, such as guardrails.

CONTROLLING – An employer “who has general supervisory authority over the worksite.”

That may include the power to correct safety and health issues or to get another employer(s) to fix those issues.

“Control can be established by contract or, in the absence of explicit contractual provisions, by the exercise of control in practice,” OSHA says.

An employer can be more than one type. For example a creating, correcting or controlling employer “will often also be an exposing employer.” Also, an exposing, creating or controlling employer can be a correcting employer if they’re authorized to correct a hazard.

‘Reasonable care’

OSHA follows a two-step process. The first: determining the type of employer. The next is to see “if a citation is appropriate.” In that second step, OSHA determines if an employer has obligations to its requirements and if their actions “were sufficient to meet those obligations.”

That section of the policy also includes the first reference to an important term, “reasonable care.” It’s akin to another term that OSHA uses, “good-faith efforts,” Fairfax said. The OSHA policy gives a list of factors for reasonable care, how to evaluate reasonable care for controlling and correcting employers, and examples.

Matuga

Here’s how Rob Matuga, assistant vice president of labor, safety and health at the National Association of Home Builders, said his organization explains the concept to its members: “Reasonable care generally requires periodic inspections of the worksite, and can be demonstrated by implementing a system for correcting hazards and enforcing a safety and health compliance program.”

Fairfax said documenting actions, such as inspections or instructions to other employers on a jobsite, is vital. “That shows if OSHA comes in, that you have a commitment to health and safety and you’re making a good faith effort to make sure everyone’s protected.

“If an employer can say, ‘I went out (to inspect the jobsite) on this day at this time. And then two days later I went out.’ And just be able to show something on a piece of paper, it goes a long way with OSHA.”

‘Everyone has a responsibility’

In November 2018, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit upheld OSHA’s multi-employer policy, becoming the eighth circuit to do so. That circuit covers Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas.

In Fairfax’s opinion, OSHA should see if its policy needs updating and, if so, it should incorporate any letters of interpretation that would provide guidance. “It has stood the test of time, but you suddenly don’t want it going before court. And this happens to OSHA sometimes. They let a policy just go and go, and then all of a sudden, it goes before court. And the judge says, ‘Well, wait a minute, you’ve issued all these letters of interpretation. And here you have a policy document that’s never incorporated them or have been updated. So I’m going to strike these violations.’”

Cannon

Kevin Cannon, senior director of safety, health and risk management for the Associated General Contractors of America and a member of OSHA’s Advisory Committee on Construction Safety and Health, said the agency should clarify “duty of care” for controlling employers. “It could be pretty much put in black and white instead of very broad or vague language. Be clear as far as your expectations for the controlling employer.”

Matuga said NAHB would like OSHA to “clarify responsibilities” on multi-employer worksites so an employer(s) won’t get cited for safety violations if the employer:

  1. Has not created the condition that caused a violation(s)
  2. Has no employees exposed to the violation
  3. Has not assumed responsibility for ensuring compliance by other employers on a worksite.

An OSHA spokesperson said the agency has no current plans to update its policy. For the present, Cannon said, one of the best ways employers can comply with the multi-employer policy is with communication and coordination. “The primary message is that everyone has a responsibility to ensure that they’re helping to maintain the jobsite as safe as possible.”