News, Strategies and Resources for Senior HR Executives  
 
Search
powered by Workindex®
Advanced Search | Browse the Directory
Web Exclusive Content
Home
HR News Analysis
Features
Columnists
People
Resources and Tools
Technology Center
Legal Clinic
HRE Conferences
HRE Rankings
Webinars
RSS
Career Center
HR Internet Search
powered by workindex
HRE Information
Subscription Center
Advertiser Information
About Us
Contact Us
 

Newsletter Sign-up

Click on the name of the free newsletter below to preview:

HREOnlineTM Update
HRE News & Analysis
Bill Kutik's HR Technology Column
Carol Harnett's Benefits Column
Peter Cappelli's Talent Management Column
Special Offers
People on the Move
Susan Meisinger's HR Leadership Column
HTML Text
E-Mail Address:


Click here to unsubscribe
Privacy Policy

 

Print Email Write to the Editor Reprints

Ergonomics: The Next Battleground

At issue between OSHA and employers is the possible increase in the scope of compensable injuries in workers' compensation.

This article accompanies OSHA's Sharper Teeth.


By Steve Tuckey, Risk & Insurance®

Will ergonomics become the battlefield that business and the Obama administration fight over in the realm of workplace safety enforcement?

The Occupational Safety & Health Administration is expected to propose a rule that will have employers differentiate work-related musculoskeletal disorders from other conditions on the agency's 300 Injury and Illness log.

OSHA officials have taken pains to assure stakeholders that the proposal is not an attempt to resurrect an enforceable ergonomics standard. But some observers think there may be more to this move than meets the eye.

Cynthia Ross, CEO of Ergonomics Technologies Corp. in Syosset, N.Y., says a new standard for ergonomics might be in the works.

"When you are building a case for regulatory change you need to be able to back up your argument. You can look at this as the start of a formal data gathering effort to provide the cost justification for such a standard," she says.

The move has peaked the concern of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce whose director of labor law policy, Marc Freedman, agrees the separate listing could be a first step toward development of a broader ergonomics agenda.

"If OSHA actually gets this in place, it will support their desire to go forward and do other regulatory actions on ergonomics, which we think is hugely problematic," he says.

He also expresses concern over how musculoskeletal disorders were defined, noting that in the previous regulations under the Clinton administration, the definition was too broad.

"What it comes down to is the causes of these types of discomforts and other levels of pain that are often outside the workplace, as opposed to inside the workplace [or] ... any other hazard that OSHA regulates," he says. "The employer may very well end up being held accountable for activities outside the workplace."

Freedman also says that any new OSHA effort in relation to ergonomics could down the road end up increasing the scope of compensable injuries in the workers' compensation realm, although that would be done, if at all, on a state-by-state basis.

The Clinton administration in its final days released 1,600 pages of ergonomics rules that the GOP Congress managed to quash through the passage of riders on appropriation bills forbidding release of the rules. Ultimately, pro-business groups managed to kill the rules through the never before used Congressional Review Act.

Peg Seminario, director of health and safety for the AFL-CIO, says the Chamber and other business groups' fear of even indentifying such disorders indicates they are up for a fight.

Labor advocates believe that getting a better picture of true state of musculoskeletal disorders in the workplace could be the first step in finding solutions to lower their occurrences.

See also:


OSHA's Sharper Teeth

Q&A with David Michaels

Safety-Reporting Disincentives

OSHA Protections Enhanced



June 16, 2010

Copyright 2010© LRP Publications