NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF MANUFACTURERS, ET AL., PETITIONERS v. OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY & HEALTH ADMINISTRATION AND ELAINE L. CHAO, SECRETARY OF THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, RESPONDENTS
No. 06-1122
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
Decided May 11, 2007
Argued March 28, 2007
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Douglas J. Behr argued the cause for petitioners and intervenor in support of petitioners. With him on the brief was Lawrence P. Halprin.
Edward D. Sieger, Senior Appellate Attorney, U.S. Department of Labor, argued the cause for respondent. With him on the brief were Joseph M. Woodward, Associate Solicitor, and Ann S. Rosenthal, Deputy Associate Solicitor.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
TATEL, Circuit Judge: Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act (the Act), parties adversely affected by an occupational safety or health standard may file a petition for review at any time prior to the sixtieth day after such standard is promulgated.
I.
In order to assure so far as possible every working man and woman in the Nation safe and healthful working conditions,
This case primarily concerns how particular chemicals are classified as hazardous. Rather than attempting to identify every hazardous chemical, the HCS places primary responsibility for determining which products are hazardous on the chemical manufacturer or importer. United Steelworkers v. Auchter, 763 F.2d 728, 739 (3d Cir. 1985). Thus, the HCS defines a chemical as hazardous if there is statistically significant evidence based on at least one study conducted in accordance with established scientific principles that acute or chronic health effects may occur in exposed employees,
The HCS, however, takes two categories of hazard determinations out of company hands. First, it deems hazardous any substance on OSHA‘s list of Toxic and Hazardous
ACGIH published an updated version of the TLV list on January 31, 2006. According to petitioners, the National Association of Manufacturers and other industry groups, as well as intervenor, the United States Chamber of Commerce (throughout this opinion, we shall refer to all as NAM), the 2006 TLV list added five new substances [three kinds of calcium sulfate, coumaphos, and monochloroacetic acid] and their corresponding [threshold limit values] to the ACGIH TLV list. Pet‘rs’ Br. 12. The 2006 list also established a [threshold limit value] for a substance (propylene . . .) previously only identified as an ‘asphyxiant,’ lowered the [threshold limit values] for nine substances already on the TLV list, and changed the substantive notations associated with three substances already on the TLV list. Id. at 12-13. NAM‘s members manufacture or use chemicals affected by these changes.
II.
NAM‘s argument on the merits is straightforward. The same statute that authorizes OSHA to promulgate occupational safety and health standards,
The government‘s response is equally straightforward. Citing section 655(f)‘s requirement that petitions for review of occupational safety or health standards be brought within sixty days of promulgation and noting that the HCS provisions referencing the TLV list were promulgated in 1983 (in the cases of
The question, then, is whether the 2006 TLV list modified the HCS. If so, the sixty-day judicial review clock started running on January 31, 2006—the day the list was published—and the petition for review would be timely. If not, then the clock began running in 1987 (at the latest), which would make the petition twenty years late.
We find the government‘s arguments persuasive. The Act defines an occupational safety and health standard as a standard which requires conditions, or the adoption or use of one or more practices, means, methods, operations, or processes, reasonably necessary or appropriate to provide safe or healthful employment and places of employment.
NAM asks us to understand the HCS as defining the conditions required of its members not in terms of a general obligation to comply with the current TLV list, but more specifically in terms of the particular chemicals that industry must treat as hazardous. Yet treating the HCS as prescribing the particular chemicals for which hazard communications are required, as opposed to the system for recognizing such chemicals, would directly contradict the regulatory scheme OSHA established in 1983. With minor exceptions not relevant here, the HCS identifies no specific chemicals as hazardous, instead leaving their evaluation to ACGIH and, in the case of the one-study rule, to regulated entities themselves. NAM‘s argument for a more specific level of generality would make sense only if the statutory definition of a standard required the regulation of particular chemicals. But as we noted in Animal Legal Defense Fund, Inc. v. Glickman, we afford agencies broad deference when choosing the level of generality at which to articulate rules. 204 F.3d 229, 235 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
In sum, because the 2006 amendments to ACGIH‘s TLV list did not modify the HCS and because the HCS has remained unchanged in relevant respects for approximately twenty years, NAM‘s petition for review is untimely. Cf. Nat‘l Tank Truck Carriers, Inc. v. Fed. Highway Admin., 170 F.3d 203 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (rejecting as untimely petition for review challenging agency regulation referencing privately created list of roadworthiness criteria for commercial vehicles). In reaching this conclusion, we recognize that time limits like the one
So ordered.
