[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 29, Volume 5]
[Revised as of July 1, 2005]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 29CFR1908.1]

[Page 76-77]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
CHAPTER XVII--OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT 
                                OF LABOR
 
PART 1908_CONSULTATION AGREEMENTS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1908.1  Purpose and scope.




Sec.
1908.1 Purpose and scope.
1908.2 Definitions.
1908.3 Eligibility and funding.
1908.4 Offsite consultation.
1908.5 Requests and scheduling for onsite consultation.
1908.6 Conduct of a visit.
1908.7 Relationship to enforcement.
1908.8 Consultant specifications.
1908.9 Monitoring and evaluation.
1908.10 Cooperative Agreements.
1908.11 Exclusions.

    Authority: Secs. 7(c), 8, 21(d), Occupational Safety and Health Act 
of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 656, 657, 670) and Secretary of Labor's Order No. 6-
96 (62 FR 111, January 2, 1997).

    Source: 49 FR 25094, June 19, 1984, unless otherwise noted.


    (a) This part contains requirements for Cooperative Agreements 
between states and the Federal Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration (OSHA) under sections 21(c) of the Occupational Safety 
and Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.) and section 21(d), the 
Occupational Safety and Health Administration Compliance Assistance 
Authorization Act of 1998 (which amends the Occupational Safety and 
Health Act,) under which OSHA will utilize state personnel to provide 
consultative services to employers. Priority in scheduling such 
consultation visits must be assigned to requests received from small 
businesses which are in higher hazard industries or have the most 
hazardous conditions at issue in the request. Consultation programs 
operated under the authority of a state plan approved under Section 18 
of the Act (and funded under Section 23(g), rather than under a 
Cooperative Agreement) which provide consultative services to private 
sector employers, must be ``at least as effective as'' the section 21(d) 
Cooperative Agreement programs established by this part. The service 
will be made available at no cost to employers to assist them in 
establishing effective occupational safety and health programs for 
providing employment and places of employment which are safe and 
healthful. The overall goal is to prevent the occurrence of injuries and 
illnesses which may result from exposure to hazardous workplace 
conditions and from hazardous work practices. The principal assistance 
will be provided at the employer's worksite, but off-site assistance may 
also be provided by telephone and correspondence and at locations other 
than the employer's worksite, such as the consultation project offices. 
At the worksite, the consultant will, within the scope of the employer's 
request, evaluate the employer's program for providing employment and a 
place of employment which is safe and healthful, as well as identify 
specific hazards in the workplace, and will provide appropriate advice 
and assistance in establishing or improving the employer's safety and 
health program and in correcting any hazardous conditions identified.
    (b) Assistance may include education and training of the employer, 
the employer's supervisors, and the employer's other employees as needed 
to make the employer self-sufficient in ensuring safe and healthful work 
and working conditions. Although onsite consultation will be conducted 
independent of any OSHA enforcement activity, and

[[Page 77]]

the discovery of hazards will not mandate citation or penalties, the 
employer remains under a statutory obligation to protect employees, and 
in certain instances will be required to take necessary protective 
action. Employer correction of hazards identified by the consultant 
during a comprehensive workplace survey, and implementation of certain 
core elements of an effective safety and health program and commitment 
to the completion of others may serve as the basis for employer 
exemption from certain OSHA enforcement activities. States entering into 
Agreements under this part will receive ninety percent Federal 
reimbursement for allowable costs, and will provide consultation to 
employers requesting the service, subject to scheduling priorities, 
available resources, and any other limitations established by the 
Assistant Secretary as part of the Cooperative Agreement.
    (c) States operating approved Plans under section 18 of the Act 
shall, in accord with section 18(b), establish enforcement policies 
applicable to the safety and health issues covered by the State Plan 
which are at least as effective as the enforcement policies established 
by this part, including a recognition and exemption program.

[49 FR 25094, June 19, 1984, as amended at 65 FR 64290, Oct. 26, 2000]