Bill113th Congress

H.R. 1648

Protecting America's Workers Act

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Introduced
Apr 18, 2013
Origin Chamber
House
Policy Area
Labor and Employment
Latest Action
Jul 8, 2013

Sponsor

Rep. Miller, George [D-CA-11]

Democrat·CA-11
Bioguide ID: M000725
First Name: GEORGE
Last Name: MILLER
By Request: N
16
Cosponsors
1
Committees
4
Actions
0
Amendments
2
Related Bills
16
Subjects
1
Summaries
3
Titles
1
Text Versions

Bill Details

Update Date
Nov 15, 2022
Origin Chamber
House
Bill Type
HR
Bill Number
1,648
Congress
113
Introduced Date
Apr 18, 2013
Policy Area
Labor and Employment
Is Law
No
Jul 8, 2013Committee

Referred to the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections.

Source: House committee actions

Apr 18, 2013IntroReferralH11100

Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Source: House floor actions

Apr 18, 2013IntroReferralIntro-H

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Apr 18, 2013IntroReferral1000

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Introduced in House· Apr 18, 20130

Protecting America's Workers Act - Amends the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSHA) to expand its coverage to federal, state, and local government employees.

Authorizes the Secretary of Labor, under specified conditions, to cede OSHA jurisdiction to another federal agency with respect to certain occupational standards or regulations for such agency's employees. Declares OSHA inapplicable to working conditions covered by the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977.

Increases protections for whistle blowers under OSHA.

Prescribes requirements relating to: (1) a employer's duty to furnish a place of employment free from recognized hazards causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm that the employer creates or controls or in which the employer exposes any individual (not just an employer's employee) performing work there; (2) the posting of employee rights; (3) a site-controlling employer's duty to keep a site log for recordable injuries and illnesses of all employees, including employees of the site-controlling employer or others (including independent contractors) performing work there; (4) employer reporting of employee work-related deaths or hospitalizations, (5) a prohibition against employers adopting or implementing policies or practices that discourage or discriminate against employee reporting of work-related injuries or illnesses; (6) a prohibition against the loss of wages or employee benefits due to an employee participating in a workplace inspection; (7) investigations of incidents resulting in death or the hospitalization of two or more employees which occur in a place of employment; and (8) a prohibition against the issuing, modifying, or settling of unclassified citations for occupational health and safety standard violations.

Continues requirements relating to: (1) the rights of an employee (including a former employee or family member in lieu of an employee) who has sustained a work-related injury or illness that is the subject of an inspection or investigation; (2) an employer's right to contest citations and penalties; and (3) periods permitted for an employer to correct serious, willful, or repeated violations pending an employer's contest to a citation and procedures for stays of the time period for abatement of those violations.

Increases civil and criminal penalties for certain OSHA violators.

States that pre-final order interest on any penalties owed shall begin to accrue on the date a party contests a citation, at an interest rate calculated at the current underpayment rate.

Prescribes requirements for the Secretary's evaluation of state occupational safety and health plans as well as workplace health hazard evaluations by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).

Revises requirements for state plans for the development and enforcement of state occupational safety and health standards in lieu of applicable federal occupational safety and health standards. Requires the Secretary to approve plans that provide for state consideration of repeated occupational safety and health violations committed by an employer within the state as well as those committed under other occupational safety and health plans in states where the Secretary has jurisdiction.

Requires a state that has an approved plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards to amend its plan to conform to the requirements of this Act within 12 months after enactment of this Act.

Education and the Workforce Committee

House· Standing
Administrative law and regulatory proceduresAdministrative remediesBusiness recordsCivil actions and liabilityCriminal procedure and sentencingDepartment of LaborEmployment discrimination and employee rightsGovernment employee pay, benefits, personnel managementGovernment information and archivesGovernment studies and investigationsIntergovernmental relationsJudicial review and appealsLegal fees and court costsOccupational Safety and Health Review CommissionState and local government operationsWorker safety and health

Introduced in House

Apr 18, 2013

Protecting America's Workers Act — Informed