[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: 29CFR1908.7]

[Page 83-85]
 
                             TITLE 29--LABOR
 
CHAPTER XVII--OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT 
                                OF LABOR
 
PART 1908_CONSULTATION AGREEMENTS--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1908.7  Relationship to enforcement.

    (a) Independence. (1) Consultative activity by a State shall be 
conducted independently of any OSHA enforcement activity.
    (2) The consultative activity shall have its own identifiable 
managerial staff. In States with Plans approved under section 18 of the 
Act, this staff will be separate from the managing of compliance 
inspections and scheduling.
    (3) The identity of employers requesting onsite consultation, as 
well as the file of the consultant's visit, shall not be provided to 
OSHA for use in any compliance activity, except as provided for in Sec. 
1908.6(f)(1) (failure to eliminate imminent danger,) Sec. 1908.6(f)(4) 
(failure to eliminate serious hazards,) paragraph (b)(1) of this section 
(inspection deferral) and paragraph (b)(4) of this section (recognition 
and exemption program).
    (b) Effect upon scheduling. (1) An onsite consultative visit already 
in progress will have priority over OSHA compliance inspections except 
as provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this section. The consultant and the 
employer shall notify the compliance officer of the visit in progress 
and request delay of the inspection until after the visit is completed. 
An onsite consultative visit shall be considered ``in progress'' in 
relation to the working conditions, hazards, or situations covered by 
the visit from the beginning of the opening conference through the end 
of the correction due dates and any extensions thereof. OSHA may, in 
exercising its authority to schedule compliance inspections, assign a 
lower priority to worksites where consultation visits are scheduled.
    (2) The consultant shall terminate an onsite consultative visit 
already in progress where one of the following kinds of OSHA compliance 
inspections is about to take place:
    (i) Imminent danger investigations;
    (ii) Fatality/catastrophe investigations;
    (iii) Complaint investigations;
    (iv) Other critical inspections as determined by the Assistant 
Secretary.
    (3) An onsite consultation visit may not take place while an OSHA 
enforcement inspection is in progress at the establishment. An 
enforcement inspection shall be deemed ``in progress'' from the time a 
compliance officer initially seeks entry to the workplace to

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the end of the closing conference. An enforcement inspection will also 
be considered ``in progress'' in cases where entry is refused, until 
such times as: the inspection is conducted; the RA determines that a 
warrant to require entry to the workplace will not be sought; or the RA 
determines that allowing a consultative visit to proceed is in the best 
interest of employee safety and health. An onsite consultative visit 
shall not take place subsequent to an OSHA enforcement inspection until 
a determination has been made that no citation will be issued, or if a 
citation is issued, onsite consultation shall only take place with 
regard to those citation items which have become final orders.
    (4) The recognition and exemption program operated by the OSHA 
consultation projects provide incentives and support to smaller, high-
hazard employers to work with their employees to develop, implement, and 
continuously improve the effectiveness of their workplace safety and 
health management system.
    (i) Programmed Inspection Schedule. (A) When an employer requests 
participation in a recognition and exemption program, and undergoes a 
consultative visit covering all conditions and operations in the place 
of employment related to occupational safety and health; corrects all 
hazards that were identified during the course of the consultative visit 
within established time frames; has began to implement all the elements 
of an effective safety and health program; and agrees to request a 
consultative visit if major changes in working conditions or work 
processes occur which may introduce new hazards, OSHA's Programmed 
Inspections at that particular site may be deferred while the employer 
is working to achieve recognition and exemption status.
    (B) Employers who meet all the requirements for recognition and 
exemption will have the names of their establishments removed from 
OSHA's Programmed Inspection Schedule for a period of not less than one 
year. The exemption period will extend from the date of issuance by the 
Regional Office of the certificate of recognition.
    (ii) Inspections. OSHA will continue to make inspections in the 
following categories at sites that achieved recognition status and have 
been granted exemption from OSHA's Programmed Inspection Schedule; and 
at sites granted inspection deferrals as provided for under paragraph 
(b)(4)(i)(A) of this section:
    (A) Imminent danger.
    (B) Fatality/Catastrophe.
    (C) Formal Complaints.
    (5) When an employer requests consideration for participation in the 
recognition and exemption program under paragraph (b)(4) of this 
section, the provisions of Sec. 1908.6(e)(7), (e)(8), (f)(3), and 
(f)(5) shall apply to other-than-serious hazards as well as serious 
hazards.
    (c) Effect upon enforcement. (1) The advice of the consultant and 
the consultant's written report will not be binding on a compliance 
officer in a subsequent enforcement inspection. In a subsequent 
inspection, a compliance officer is not precluded from finding hazardous 
conditions, or violations of standards, rules or regulations, for which 
citations would be issued and penalties proposed.
    (2) The hazard identification and correction assistance given by a 
State consultant, or the failure of a consultant to point out a specific 
hazard, or other possible errors or omissions by the consultant, shall 
not be binding upon a compliance officer and need not affect the regular 
conduct of a compliance inspection or preclude the finding of alleged 
violations and the issuance of citations, or constitute a defense to any 
enforcement action.
    (3) In the event of a subsequent inspection, the employer is not 
required to inform the compliance officer of the prior visit. The 
employer is not required to provide a copy of the state consultant's 
written report to the compliance officer, except to the extent that 
disclosure of information contained in the report is required by 29 CFR 
1910.1020 or other applicable OSHA standard or regulation. If, during a 
subsequent enforcement investigation, OSHA independently determines 
there is reason to believe that the employer: failed to correct serious 
hazards identified during the course of a consultation

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visit; created the same hazard again; or made false statements to the 
state or OSHA in connection with participation in the consultation 
program, OSHA may exercise its authority to obtain the consultation 
report.
    (4) If, however, the employer chooses to provide a copy of the 
consultant's report to a compliance officer, it may be used as a factor 
in determining the extent to which an inspection is required and as a 
factor in determining proposed penalties. When, during the course of a 
compliance inspection, an OSHA compliance officer identifies the 
existence of serious hazards previously identified as a result of a 
consultative visit, the Area Director shall have authority to assess 
minimum penalties if the employer is in good faith complying with the 
recommendations of a consultant after such consultative visit.

(Approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 
1218-0110)

[49 FR 25094, June 19, 1984, as amended at 54 FR 24333, June 7, 1989; 65 
FR 64292, Oct. 26, 2000]