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OSHA’s Impact Paula O. White Directorate of Cooperative and State Programs Occupational Safety & Health Administration for Printing Alliance September 4, 2002

OSHA’s Impact

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OSHA’s Impact. Paula O. White Directorate of Cooperative and State Programs Occupational Safety & Health Administration for Printing Alliance September 4, 2002. Directorate of Cooperative and State Programs (DCSP). Office of Small Business Assistance Office of Partnerships & Recognition - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: OSHA’s Impact

OSHA’s Impact

Paula O. WhiteDirectorate of Cooperative and State ProgramsOccupational Safety & Health Administration

forPrinting Alliance

September 4, 2002

Page 2: OSHA’s Impact

Directorate of Cooperative and State Programs (DCSP)

• Office of Small Business Assistance

• Office of Partnerships & Recognition

• Office of Outreach Services & Alliances

• Office of Training & Education• Office of State Programs

Page 3: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Small Business Assistance

Page 4: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Small Business

Assistance• OSHA is launching a

permanent program created specifically for small enterprises.

• It will serve as one-stop shopping for OSHA compliance assistance for small business owners, including the Consultation Program.

Page 5: OSHA’s Impact

Consultation: for Small Businesses

• Free and confidential• Helps employer identify and

correct hazards• Provides onsite & offsite training• Assists employer in developing

or maintaining an effective safety and health management system

• No citations issued or penalties proposed

Page 6: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Partnerships & Recognition

Page 7: OSHA’s Impact

VPP Gets Results

• Nearly 820 workplaces and 180 industries in the Federal and State Plan State programs

• Over 540,000 employees covered• In 2001, participants achieved

injury rates 54% below their industry averages, with 5,876 lost workday cases avoided

Page 8: OSHA’s Impact

OSHA Strategic Partnerships OSPs are voluntary,

cooperative agreements between OSHA and groups of employers, employees, and other stakeholders.

Page 9: OSHA’s Impact

Safety & Health Achievement & Recognition Program (SHARP)

Responsibilities:• Develop and

implement a safety and health management system

• Maintain injury and illness rates below your industry average

Benefits:• Removal from

programmed inspection list for 1 year

• Recognition and promotion

Page 10: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Outreach Services and Alliances

Page 11: OSHA’s Impact

Outreach Services • Develop and implement agency-

wide plan addressing assistance priorities, materials, and assignment of responsibilities.

• Establish network of contacts with key health and safety organizations and other government agencies

• Coordinate OSHA compliance assistance efforts

Page 12: OSHA’s Impact

Outreach & Assistance Tools

• www.osha.gov– Spanish page– eTools– Laws & regulations– Training & outreach on new regs

• QuickTakes• Compliance Assistance Specialists

Page 13: OSHA’s Impact

Alliances

• Focus on any combination of:

– Training & Education– Outreach & Communication– Promoting National

Dialogue

Page 14: OSHA’s Impact

How Alliances Work

• Broadly-written agreement documents

• Customized implementation teams– Consultation representative invited– State plan representative invited

• One year, renewable• Quarterly update meetings/telecons

Page 15: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Training & Education

Page 16: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Training and Education

Responsibility for safety and health training programs for:•Federal & State OSHA• State Consultation Staff

– Other Federal Agencies– Private Sector

Page 17: OSHA’s Impact

Office of Training and Education

• OSHA Training Institute

Des Plaines, IL• Education Centers• Susan Harwood

Grants• Distance Learning

Page 18: OSHA’s Impact

Office of State Programs

Page 19: OSHA’s Impact

Office of State Programs• Administers program for

the review, approval, funding and evaluation of State OS&H plans

• 26 OSHA-approved State plans

• 23 cover private & public sector (state & local gov’t)

Page 20: OSHA’s Impact

State OS&H Plans

• Section 18 of OSH Act of 1970 authorizes State plans and sets approval criteria

• Operate under authority of state law and adopt own standards

• OSHA funds 50% of the cost of state programs

Page 21: OSHA’s Impact

Cooperative Program Contacts

• Office of Partnerships & Recognition– [email protected]

• Office of Outreach Services & Alliances– [email protected]

• Office of Small Business Assistance– [email protected]

• Office of Training & Education– [email protected]