Is your company covered by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) record keeping requirement? If so, you must post your OSHA 300A Summary, or OSHA log, in a conspicuous place for employees to see from February 1 – April 30 each year.
Knowing whether your company is subject to OSHA’s record keeping requirement boils down to two factors: your industry and company size.
Companies that are low-risk industries are not required to maintain an OSHA log unless asked in writing to do so. Your company also needs to have employed 11+ employees at any given point during the year to maintain an OSHA injury and illness record.
If your company is required to maintain an OSHA log, any worksite injury or illness from the previous year that needed treatment beyond first aid should be recorded in your OSHA 300 log (page 7 of the OSHA 300 booklet).
Keep in mind, however, that any company of any industry or size still needs to report serious injuries to OSHA. Those injuries include anything that results in a fatality, in-patient hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye.
To satisfy the OSHA requirement, you should only post the Summary of injuries from the previous year rather than the detailed OSHA log. The OSHA 300A Summary is found on page 8 of the OSHA 300 booklet.
OSHA requires the previous year’s OSHA 300A Summary to be posted from February 1 through April 30 in a conspicuous place for employees to see, such as the break room. Even if no injuries occurred in the previous year, qualifying employers are required to post the summary to meet the requirements of this law.
In conjunction with posting the summary at work, a separate compliance provision requires some employers to submit the same information recorded in the OSHA Form 300A Summary online. (Learn why here.)
Employers with fewer than 20 employees at the peak of employment during the last calendar year (including full-time, part-time, seasonal, and temporary workers) are excluded from having to submit their OSHA 300A Summary online. However, companies with 20-249 employees in any of these industries must comply with the online record keeping rule.
To submit your OSHA 300A Summary online, please visit Login.gov.
If Stratus HR administers your workers’ comp policy AND your company is required to comply due to industry and size, Stratus will also submit your data online. You will receive notification when it is completed.
Clients that administer their own workers’ comp policy will need to submit their information via Login.gov. For assistance, please contact your Stratus Representative prior to Feb 1.
For more information, please contact our HR team (talk or text 801-984-1331). Not a client? Book a consultation and our team will be in touch with you shortly!