Subject: GEA Newsletter #14 July 28, 2023

Newsletter #14 July 28, 2023

EMPLOYMENT LAW NEWS

Constangy.com News & Analysis
OSHA announces new electronic filing rule


07.20.23


The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has announced a revision of its injury and illness electronic filing regulation, 29 CFR § 1904.41. Scheduled to be published in the Federal Register tomorrow and to go into effect on January 1, the new regulation will require many employers to submit even more of their injury and illness data electronically on the OSHA website.


By March 2, 2024, the following workplaces will be required to electronically file injury and illness data:


  • Establishments (individual work sites) with 100 or more employees in certain designated North America Industrial Classification System codes will be required to file their OSHA 300 Logs, 301 forms for each case recorded on the 300 Log, and the 300A Annual Summary form. This is a new list of High-Hazard Industries. (See table beginning on page 268 at the link.)

  • Establishments with between 20 and 249 employees in certain designated NAICS codes must continue to file their OSHA 300A Annual Summary forms.

  • Establishments with 250 or more employees, regardless of whether they are within the designated NAICS codes, must continue to file their OSHA 300A Annual Summary forms.


In determining whether you are covered by the electronic filing requirements, the focus is on the number of employees at any time during the previous calendar year for a specific worksite or establishment, not on the total head count of a company.


The greatest expansion under the new regulation is the obligation to provide OSHA 300 Logs and 301 forms for each case recorded on the Log. Although you have to submit the OSHA 300 Log, you can delete the names of the injured and ill employees from the OSHA 300 Log, as well as the employee name and address, the name of the physician or other health care professional who rendered treatment, and the name and address of the PHCP from the 301 form.


OSHA will eventually publish this data on its website, providing the public with, among other information, establishment-specific data. For example, although employee names will not be disclosed, any member of the public, including your competitors and any union, will have access to all of the information on your OSHA 300 Logs and 301 forms.


This is obviously a significant change, and a cynic might suspect that some employers will under-report their injuries and illnesses because of the new public availability of this information. But up to this point, if an employee wanted to see an OSHA 300 Log, the employee had to ask the employer for a copy. With the new online availability of these records, employees, former employees, and their representatives will be able to review your recordkeeping decisions by directly accessing the OSHA website without involving you. This by itself may tend to discourage under-reporting. With this increased attention on OSHA recordkeeping, it seems likely that OSHA may establish a Special Emphasis Program on Injury and Illness recordkeeping to ensure that the new requirements do not serve as a disincentive to accurate recordkeeping.


Please let us know if you have any questions about these new requirements or if you need any help to ensure that your recordkeeping practices are compliant.

For a printer-friendly copy, click here.



SHRM.org EMPLOYMENT LAW
Pay Attention to Prohibition on Comp Time for Nonexempt Workers in Private Sector


By Allen Smith, J.D. 

July 24, 2023


Comp time is allowed in the public sector, but private-sector employers are prohibited from offering future paid time off to nonexempt employees in lieu of complying with the overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA).


That said, "offering paid time off in future workweeks to reward an exempt employee for having gone above and beyond the normal work expectations is not prohibited," stated James Coleman, an attorney with Constangy, Brooks, Smith & Prophete in Fairfax, Va.


Rules of the Road


True compensatory time, in the sense of what's permissible for public-sector employers to pay to nonexempt employees, occurs when overtime hours are worked in one workweek, and instead of paying overtime at the rate of 1.5 times the employee's "regular rate of pay," the employer credits 1.5 hours to a comp time bank for every hour worked over 40. Then the employee is allowed to use their banked comp time hours in future workweeks as a form of paid leave, Coleman explained.


"The FLSA has detailed regulations that govern the use of comp time, including that there be an agreement or understanding upfront, strict pay-out rules, limits on how much comp time can be accrued, and payment upon termination of employment," he said. "The biggest limitation is that private-sector employers may not use comp time" for nonexempt employees.....Continue Reading>>>



HRDive.com DIVE BRIEF
Biden administration cracks down on payers over mental health coverage


The new rule is meant to ensure that payers are providing adequate psychological treatment and investing in their provider networks.


Published July 25, 2023

Rebecca Pifer Senior Reporter

Dive Brief:

  • The Biden administration is looking to force health insurers to come into compliance with a 2008 law that attempted to create coverage parity between mental and physical healthcare, as health plan roadblocks continue to curtail access to mental health services.

  • The HHS and Treasury and Labor departments announced a new proposed rule on Tuesday that requires health insurers to analyze patient outcomes to ensure their benefits are administered equally, including evaluating provider networks and payments to out-of-network providers. The rule would also forbid plans from using more restrictive medical management techniques like prior authorization or narrower networks for mental health and substance use providers than those for other medical providers.

  • Noncompliant plans would have to take remedial action, such as adding more therapists to their networks if patients seek out-of-network care too often. Payers could also face fines......Continue Reading >>>

TRAINING UPDATES

Constangy Employment Law and HR Legal Updates

Monthly Webinar

Topic: Wage and Hour Pitfalls (How to manage these issues as arise)

Presenter: Alyssa Peters / Partner

Date: August 1st (New Date!!)

Time: 11:00am EST - Click Here to Register

If you are interested in Georgia Employers’ Association membership, please contact Buddy McGehee, Executive Director at
478-722-8282 or director@georgiaemployers.org



*****************


Make Plans to Join Us All Day for Our Annual

Labor & Employment Law Workshop

Tuesday, September 26, 2023 - Georgia Sports Hall of Fame

STAY TUNED FOR MORE DETAILS!

www.constangy.com



*****************



GEA WEBINAR SERIES

Topic: HUMANA is exiting the health insurance business. What options do you need to know?

PRESENTER: Peachtree Benefit Group

DATE: Wednesday, August 2nd - TIME: 10:30am – 11:30am

Free Webinar - Click Here to Register



*****************



GEA Webinar Series

Topic: Learn how Insurance Captives are helping control the

long-term costs of medical insurance plans.

Presenters: Pareto Health and Peachtree Benefit Group

DATE: Thursday, August 17th - TIME: 11:00am – 12:00pm

Price: Free - Click Here to Register



Georgia Employers' Association

Phone: 478-722-8282 or Email: director@georgiaemployers.org



Powered by:
GetResponse