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California COVID-19 Emergency Rule Adopted by Standards Board

By Conn Maciel Carey’s COVID-19 Task Force

Not to be outdone by Virginia OSHA, Oregon OSHA, or Michigan OSHA, Cal/OSHA is on the precipice of issuing an onerous COVID-19 specific regulation that is expected to be issued, with all provisions immediately effective, next week.  Below is detailed summary of how we got here, as well as an outline of what the California rule will require.

On November 19, 2020, the California’s Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board (“Board”) voted unanimously to adopt an Emergency COVID-19 Prevention Rule following a contentious public hearing with over 500 participants in attendance (albeit virtually).  The Emergency Rule has been presented to California’s Office of Administrative Law (“OAL”) for approval and publication. OAL has ten days to approve the Rule; if approved, the Rule will become immediately effective, likely next Monday, November 30th.  The Rule brings with it a combination of requirements overlapping with and duplicative of already-existing state and county requirements applicable to employers, as well as a number of new and, in some cases, very burdensome, compliance obligations.

The Board’s emergency rulemaking was triggered last May with the submission of a Petition for an emergency rulemaking filed by worker advocacy group WorkSafe and National Lawyers’ Guild, Labor & Employment Committee.  The Petition requested the Board amend Title 8 standards to create two new regulations – the first, a temporary emergency standard that would provide specific protections to California employees who may experience exposure to COVID-19, but who are not already covered by Cal/OSHA’s existing Aerosol Transmissible Diseases standard (section 5199, which applies generally to healthcare employers); and the second, a regular rulemaking for a permanent infectious diseases standard, including novel pathogens such as SARS-CoV-2.  Note that emergency rulemakings are rare and must meet a very high threshold designed to allow this abbreviated process; only when a true emergency necessitates this process.  Here is a very simplified flowchart of the emergency standards rulemaking process.

Interestingly, the Standard Board’s staff found that a new COVID-19 rule was unnecessary because much of the proposed requirements recommended by WorkSafe’s Petition are already addressed under Cal/OSHA’s Injury and Illness Prevention Program Standard (“IIPP”), and therefore, recommended that the Petition be denied.  DOSH staff, however, recommended that the Petition be approved, finding that an emergency regulation is warranted by the COVID-19 public health crisis and that the agency’s enforcement efforts would benefit from a specific regulatory mandate related to COVID-19.

On September 17th, the Standards Board accepted DOSH’s recommendation, finding that an emergency regulation “would strengthen, rather than complicate, [DOSH’s] enforcement efforts[,]” and issued a decision granting (in part) WorkSafe’s Petition.  While the Board did not agree to implement the specific proposed emergency regulation advanced by WorkSafe, it did instruct DOSH to work with Board staff to submit a new proposal for an emergency regulation by no later than November 19, 2020.

Accordingly, the Board published its proposed emergency rule late in the day on Thursday, November 12, 2020, giving the public only five days (and barely that) to comment on the 100-page rulemaking package.  Conn Maciel Carey worked with a coalition of California and national employers to quickly evaluate the proposed emergency rule and develop comments that raised a number of serious concerns, not only about the substance of the rule, but also about the extremely rushed nature of the rulemaking process, which afforded the regulated community no real opportunity for meaningful input, and the Board essentially no opportunity to consider comments.

Nonetheless, after a contentious public hearing last Thursday, the Board unanimously voted to adopt the Emergency Rule and forwarded it to the OAL, California final gatekeeper for new regulations, for final approval and publication. On behalf of our coalition, Conn Maciel today submitted an additional set of comments to the OAL focused on the inappropriate and impermissible restrictions that have prevented stakeholder participation in this emergency rulemaking process.

[UPDATE – As expected, late in the day on November 30th, California’s OAL officially approved the emergency rule, making all provisions immediately effective.  Here’s an additional article that summarizes what will happen next with the rule.]

To help California employers prepare for the likely issuance of this Rule by next week, below is an outline of the Rule and a detailed list of the compliance obligations imposed on most California employers:

At the heart of this emergency rulemaking is the requirement that employers develop a written COVID-19 prevention program consisting of well-established elements, such as physical distancing; face coverings; engineering and administrative controls; PPE; excluding from the workplace positive and exposed employees; return to work protocols; training; and employee communication.  Consistent with California’s Injury and Illness Prevention Program requirements, employers must also conduct workplace COVID-19 hazard assessments, adopt procedures for investigating and responding to every positive case, and develop procedures for correcting the hazards they identify.  There are also detailed reporting and recordkeeping mandates.

Additionally, California has adopted a series of unique requirements in the event of outbreaks (3 or more cases in 14 days) and major outbreaks (20 or more cases in 30 days), which include logistically challenging mandatory testing and mitigation measures.

Establish, implement and maintain a written COVID-19 prevention program which may but is not required to be integrated into the Illness and Injury Prevention Program.

The 11 required elements an employer’s CPP include:

 

COVID-19 testing.

Exclusion.  Ensure COVID-19 cases and employees who had COVID-19 exposure are excluded from the workplace in accordance with the exclusion and RTW sections of the employer’s CPP and local health officer orders if applicable

Investigation and Correction. Investigate immediately and determine possible workplace related factors that contributed to the COVID-19 outbreak by reviewing potentially relevant COVID-19 policies, procedures, and controls and implement changes as needed to prevent further spread of COVID-19.  Document said review.

Notifications to Local Health Department.

Assuming the emergency rule is approved by the OAL, there is some light at the end of the tunnel in that, during the November 19, 2020 hearing, the Standards Board asked DOSH to convene an Advisory Committee meeting as early as the first week of December to start working on improvements to the rule.  As such, the best opportunity for employers to influence this emergency rule will be coming soon.  Conn Maciel Carey plans to participate in the Advisory Committee process and will continue to monitor this developing situation.

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For additional resources on issues related to COVID-19, please visit Conn Maciel Carey’s COVID-19 Resource Page for an extensive index of frequently asked questions with our answers about HR, employment law, and OSHA regulatory related developments and guidance, as well as COVID-19 recordkeeping and reporting flow charts.

Likewise, subscribe to our Employer Defense Report blog and OSHA Defense Report blog for regular updates about the Labor and Employment Law or OSHA implications of COVID-19 in the workplace.  Conn Maciel Carey’s COVID-19 Task Force is monitoring federal, state, and local developments closely and is continuously updating these blogs and the FAQ page with the latest news and resources for employers.

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