The US federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has revised portions of its national enforcement policies, reducing penalties for employers that take prompt action to correct identified violations, and raising the ceiling for special small business penalty reductions from employers with 10 or fewer employees to those with 25 or fewer employees. These revisions appear in Chapter 6 (Penalties and Debt Collection) of OSHA’s Field Operations Manual (FOM). The remainder of this note discusses these revisions.
Audit, Compliance and Risk Blog
Tags: OSHA, Occupational Health, Worker Safety, Workplace Safety Guidelines, Safety Standards, Occupational Safety, Field Operations Manual, FOM
Trump Administration proposes limited cuts in OSHA budget
Posted by Jon Elliott on Fri, Jul 18, 2025
On May 2, the Trump Administration issued its budget proposal for federal Fiscal Year (FY) 2026 (October 1, 2025 through September 30, 2026). The administration proposes a $582,381,000 budget for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), which would be a 7.9% ($49,928,000) decrease from OSHA’s adopted 2025 budget of $632.3 million (the Biden Administration had proposed $655.5 million; I wrote about it HERE). The remainder of this note summarizes the Administration proposal.
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Tags: OSHA, workplace safety, Trump, Trump Administration, Workplace Safety Guidelines, Regulatory Compliance, Safety Standards, FY 2026 Budget, Federal Budget Proposal, Occupational Safety