Injury and Illness Prevention Program Stats and Facts
FACTS
Employer has committed an “egregious violation” for any of the following:
- The employer, intentionally, through conscious, voluntary action or inaction, made no reasonable effort to eliminate the known violation.
- The violations resulted in worker fatalities, a worksite catastrophe, or a large number of injuries or illnesses.
- The violations resulted in persistently high rates of worker injuries or illnesses.
- The employer has an extensive history of prior violations.
- The employer has intentionally disregarded their health and safety responsibilities.
- The employer’s conduct, taken as a whole, amounts to clear bad faith in the performance of their duty to provide a safe work environment.
- The employer has committed a large number of violations so as to undermine significantly the effectiveness of any safety and health program that might be in place.
STATS
- In the four decades since the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) was signed into law, workplace deaths and reported occupational injuries have dropped by more than 60 percent.
- Every day, more than 12 workers die on the job – over 4,500 a year.
- Every year, more than 4.1 million workers suffer a serious job-related injury or illness.
- Each year, Cal/OSHA issues more than 2,000 IIPP-related citations. That’s more than any other violation. And with each citation comes a fine. Fines range from $500 to more than $12,000, depending on the frequency and severity of the infraction.
- Because about 25 % of all inspections cite the IIPP, citations of the specific subsections occur in about 5 percent of all inspections. In those inspections, the total recordable injury rate falls by more than 20 percent in the two years following the inspection.
- Once an establishment had been cited for an IIPP violation, the likelihood of finding another IIPP violation at that establishment declined substantially. In fact, workplace citations that cited a particular subsection showed a 26% decrease in injury rates the following year. Most significantly, citations for failure to provide appropriate training saw a 53% reduction in injuries after the inspection.