Author: Taneil Jaeger/Thursday, January 5, 2017/Categories: Bulletin News, Compliance Corner , Federal Compliance Update
Occupational Safety and Health Administration's (OSHA) Recordkeeping Standard, 29CFR1904, requires that certain employers maintain annual records of workplace injuries and illnesses. Records of workplace injuries and illnesses are maintained on an OSHA 300 Log each calendar year and summarized on an annual summary log or OSHA 300A Summary. The 300A is required to be posted in the workplace every February through April to show records from the previous years' injuries and illnesses.
Helping your company comply with OSHA regulations is one of the key benefits of ADP TotalSource®. If your company is not exempt from OSHA recordkeeping requirements, ADP TotalSource® will help you fulfill this responsibility by providing your company a preliminary 300 Log and 300A Summary at the end of January. The preliminary 300 and 300A Summary logs will be emailed to each client who is not exempt from this requirement.
As the worksite employer, you may need to take additional steps to ensure your logs fully capture the information required by OSHA. The preliminary 300 and 300A Summary are based on the workers' compensation data reported to TotalSource and may not contain all of the information necessary to complete the logs. The preliminary logs may be missing adequate details describing the injury or cause of injury. Additionally, since workers compensation and OSHA recordable injuries are not directly correlated, there may have been injuries at your workplace that were not reported to workers compensation or were denied by workers compensation that should be included on your OSHA log. For example, OSHA requires that controlling worksite employers’ record injury and illness data for temporary employees and subcontracted employees; TotalSource does not have access to this injury data, and it will not be included on your preliminary log.
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