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Contents > Section 10.10
A SUMMARY OF THE PUBLIC EMPLOYMENT
RISK REDUCTION LAW
- (Ohio Revised Code 4167.01-4107.18)
The Public Employment Risk Reduction Law of January, 1993 requires
public employers to furnish places of employment that are "free from
recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or
serious physical harm" to public employees. A newly-created Division
of Occupational Safety and Health will enforce occupational safety
and health standards on Ohio's public employers, including
state-supported universities. A public employer's facilities can be
inspected when complaints are filed, and citations can be given. In
addition to following safety standards, employers must keep records
of work-related injuries and illnesses, and must monitor employee
exposures to hazardous materials. The law provides a mechanism for
public employees to refuse work due to unsafe working conditions.
Variances from standards can be granted to employers. he following
discussion summarizes the new law by topics.
TIME TABLES FOR IMPLEMENTATION
- By July, 1993: Public Employees Risk Reduction Commission is
appointed.
- Effective July 1, 1993: right to refuse work provision goes
into effect.
- By July 1, 1994: adopt federal OSHA standards.
- Starting July 1, 1994: OSHA standards apply to public
employers and public employees.
- Until January 1, 1995: public employers can request free (no
penalty) inspections.
- After January 1, 1995: citations can be given
ORGANIZATIONS AFFECTED BY THE LAW
- The law applies to all types of public employers, including
counties, cities, townships and villages, park districts, school
districts, state agencies and boards, and state colleges and
universities. However, the bill specifically excludes fire
fighters, peace officers, and employees of correctional
facilities.
ESTABLISHMENT AND ENFORCEMENT OF SAFETY STANDARDS
- This legislation creates the Division of Occupational Safety
and Health within the Department of Industrial Relations. The
Division of Occupational Safety and Health will enforce safety
standards applicable to public employers.
- Ohio will adopt standards of the federal Occupational Safety
and Health Administration. After adopting these initial standards,
Ohio can adopt or amend new federal standards, adopt standards
that are not covered under federal law, or decline to adopt new
federal standards if the Public Employment Risk Reduction Advisory
Commission determines that existing Ohio standards provide
adequate protection. Public employees and public employers are
equally represented on this 16-member Commission, which includes
one representative from the Inter-University Council (IUC). In
addition to determining standards, the Public Employment Risk
Reduction Advisory Commission will develop rules for the operation
and enforcement of these standards, including granting of
variances (discussed later).
TOXIC MATERIALS
- Ohio's public employment risk reduction law gives special
emphasis to the adoption of rules dealing with toxic materials.
The best available evidence must be used in setting standards that
protect health "for the period of the public employee's working
life." Exposures to potentially toxic and harmful materials must
be monitored. Public employees must be warned of all the hazards
to which they are exposed and instructed on precautions and
protective equipment to use. The public employer will pay for
medical examinations resulting from exposure to hazardous
materials and other tests as established by Ohio's risk reduction
standards.
INSPECTIONS AND INVESTIGATIONS
- The Division of Occupational Safety and Health can inspect,
make inquiries, and examine records in any public employment site.
The inspections shall take place only when a public employee,
public employee representative, or public employer states in
writing that a violation of a risk reduction standard is believed
to exist. Names of those sending the written notice will remain
confidential. The alleged violation is then made known to the
public employer who, within 30 days following notification of the
violation, has an opportunity to correct the violation or respond
to the Division of Occupational Safety and Health before an
inspection takes place.
- If an inspection does take place, the Division of Occupational
Safety and Health has the right to look at any area where
violations of risk reduction standards are believed to exist. If
serious violations are found during an inspection, the public
employer can be ordered to discontinue an operation. The Division
of Occupational Safety and Health can ask any court of common
pleas to order an immediate restraining order for conditions and
practices that present an imminent hazard. When the Division of
Occupational Safety and Health cites an employer for violating a
risk reduction standard, it shall cause the employer to post the
violation, and shall set a time for correction of the
violation.
- Citations can be appealed. After all administrative appeals
are exhausted, a public employer can ask a court of common pleas
to find for the existence of an undue hardship and grant a
suspension of an order. If public employers, public employees, or
public employee representatives willfully fail to comply with a
final order of the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, a
court of common pleas will be asked to enforce compliance. The
court shall impose a penalty of not more than five hundred dollars
a day per violation, not to exceed a total of ten thousand
dollars.
RIGHTS AND DUTIES OF EMPLOYEES
- Public employees can refuse to work under conditions that they
believe to "present an imminent danger of death or serious harm,"
and when these conditions "are not such as normally exist for or
reasonably might be expected to occur in the occupation of the
public employee." Public employees can refuse to work under these
conditions when: they request the employer to correct the
conditions but the conditions are not corrected; there is
insufficient time to use normal enforcement methods (described
above); "the danger was one that a reasonable person under the
circumstances then confronting the public employee would conclude
is an imminent danger of death or serious physical harm to the
public employee;" and an employee or employer sends a written,
signed notification to the Chief of the Division of Occupational
Safety and Health about the reason for refusing to work.
Occupational Safety and Health can then conduct an
inspection.
- A public employee who follows these steps shall have a right
to continued employment and payment for tasks that would have been
performed. Public employees who believe that they have been
discriminated against in any manner by filing complaints or
proceedings under this law can seek administrative remedies.
Public employees who do not follow the steps summarized above when
refusing to work are subject to disciplinary action, such as
suspension or discharge.
GRANTING OF VARIANCES
- A public employer can ask for an exemption from a standard
that would cause an undue hardship due to difficulty or expense in
achieving a standard. The Division of Occupational Safety and
Health can grant a temporary or permanent variance when a public
employer follows specified steps in requesting the variance, when
the variance will not create an imminent danger to public
employees, and when the Division of Occupational Safety and Health
is convinced that other methods proposed by the public employer
provide the same protection as Ohio's risk reduction
standard.
RECORDS AND PUBLIC INFORMATION
- Public employers will send to the Division of Occupational
Safety and Health reports and records of deaths and lost-time
occupational illnesses and injuries, as part of semiannual payroll
reports submitted to the Bureau of Workers Compensation. Records
of exposures to potentially harmful materials must be maintained
and made available to employees and their representatives. Public
employees and their representatives have the right to conduct
their own monitoring of harmful materials. Public employees must
be informed of employee rights and obligations under the new law
through postings and other methods.
TRAINING
- Industrial Relations and the Bureau of Workers Compensation
shall conduct training programs to assist public employers and
employees in recognizing and preventing unsafe working conditions.
The law does not preclude public employers from conducting their
own training.
- BGSU
Environmental Health and Safety
- March 18, 1993
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