OSHA Administrative
Penalty Information Bulletin – July 2011
OSHA is implementing several
changes to its administrative penalty calculation system. Many of the agency's
current penalty adjustment factors have been in place since the early 1970's,
resulting in penalties which are often too low to have an adequate deterrent
effect. Administrative penalty adjustments will therefore be made to several
factors which impact the final penalty issued to employers. These factors include:
- History Reduction
- History Increase
- Repeat Violations
- Severe Violator Enforcement
Program
- Gravity-Based Penalty
- Size Reduction
- Good Faith
- Minimum Penalties
- Additional Administrative
Modifications to the Penalty Calculation Policy
A brief description of each
penalty adjustment factor and planned changes are provided below:
- History Reduction
The time frame for considering an employer's history of violations will expand
from three years to five. An employer who has been inspected by OSHA within
the previous five years and has not been issued any serious, willful, repeat,
or failure-to-abate citations will receive a 10 percent reduction for history.
- History Increase
An employer that has been cited by OSHA for any high gravity serious, willful,
repeat, or failure-to-abate violation within the previous five years will
receive a 10 percent increase in their penalty, up to the statutory maximum.
Employers who have not been inspected and those who have received citations
for serious violations that were not high gravity will receive neither a reduction
nor an increase for history.
- Repeat Violations
The time period for considering the classification of repeated violations
will be increased from three to five years.
- Severe Violator
Enforcement Program
Where circumstances warrant, at the discretion of the Area Director, high
gravity serious violations related to standards and hazards identified in
the SVEP will not normally be grouped or combined, and may be cited as separate
violations, with individual proposed penalties.
- Gravity-Based
Penalty (GBP)
The gravity of a violation is the primary consideration in calculating penalties
and is established by assessing the severity of the injury/illness which could
result from a hazard and the probability that an injury or illness could occur.
OSHA is adopting a gravity-based penalty structure for serious citations which
will range from $3,000 to $7,000.
- Size Reduction
OSHA will be amending its penalty reduction structure based on the size of
employers, allowing for a penalty reduction between 10 and 40 percent for
those with less than 250 employees. No size reduction will be applied for
employers with 251 or more employees.
- Good Faith
The current good faith procedures in the Field Operations Manual will be retained.
A penalty reduction is permitted in recognition of an employer's effort to
implement an effective workplace safety and health program. Employers must
have a safety and health program in place to get any good faith reduction.
Good faith reductions are not allowed in the cases of high gravity serious,
willful, repeat, or failure-to-abate violations.
The 15% Quick-Fix reduction, which is currently allowed as an abatement incentive
program to encourage employers to immediately abate hazards identified during
inspections, remains unchanged. However, the 10% reduction for employers with
a strategic partnership agreement will be eliminated.
- Minimum Penalties
The minimum proposed penalty for a serious violation will be increased to
$500. When the proposed penalty for a serious violation would amount to less
than $500, a $500 penalty will be proposed for that violation. The proposed
minimum penalty for a posting violation will increase to $250 if the company
was previously provided a poster by OSHA.
- Additional Administrative
Modifications to the Penalty Calculation Policy
Final penalties will be calculated serially, unlike the current practice where
all penalty reductions are added and the total percentage of reductions is
then multiplied by the gravity-based penalty to arrive at the proposed penalty.
All penalty adjustment factors will be applied serially.
These changes will establish
general agency policy and do not preclude the agency from assessing a different
penalty, where appropriate under the Act, in light of all circumstances in a
particular case.