OPINION
W.G. Fairfield argues that the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission acted arbitrarily or capriciously by affirming a citation for violating two Occupational Safety and Health Act regulations. We affirm.
I
There are no disputed facts. Digging a trench beside a six-lane stretch of 1-71 in Ohio, a highway construction crew of Fair-field employees unexpectedly struck a cable. To see if the cable had been pulled loose, one of the workers, Floyd Wolfe, walked across the three northbound lanes of the interstate to inspect a junction box located at the median. Unable to trace the cable, he then attempted to cross the three southbound lanes, was struck by a ear, and sustained fatal injuries.
*503 None of the interstate’s lanes had been closed for the project and there was no flagman to direct or stop traffic, but signs had been placed on the northbound side of the interstate to warn approaching motorists, who were traveling at an average rate of 70 miles per hour, that work was being performed on the northbound shoulder. There were no signs indicating work being done on the median or on the southbound lanes.
After an OSHA inspection, the Secretary of Labor cited Fairfield for three violations. During
“E-Z
Trial” proceedings, the ALJ dismissed one of the violations and affirmed the remaining two: a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.20(b)(1), the employer’s duty to initiate and maintain safety programs; and a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2), the employer’s duty to instruct employees to recognize and avoid unsafe conditions. The ALJ concluded “that a reasonable person could not stand at the side of a six lane interstate highway with traffic traveling between 65 and 70 miles per hour and rationally think they could cross safely on foot,” and that the practice of crossing the highway on foot should have been prohibited.
W.G. Fairfield Co.,
In a split decision, the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission affirmed the violations.
Secretary of Labor v. W.G. Fairfield Co.,
II
Fairfield and the
amicus curiae
Ohio Contractors Association raise a host of arguments related to due process, legal error, and insufficiency of the evidence.
1
However couched, the determinative issue is whether Fairfield acted as a “reasonably prudent employer” in conforming its safety program to any known duty to correct and detect hazards.
See Northwood Stone & Asphalt, Inc.,
A. Standard of Review
Factual findings by the OSHRC should be affirmed if “substantial evidence in the record taken as a whole” support them.
Nat’l Eng’g and Contracting Co. v. OSHA
We deny Fairfield’s request that we not consider the Secretary’s argument about the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (“MUTCD”) because it was never before raised.
3
“ ‘It is well accepted ... that without filing a cross-appeal or cross petition, an appellee may rely upon any matter appearing in the record in support of the judgment below.’ The statutory argument raised by the appellees, although not presented in the District Court, may be decided on the basis of the record developed in that court.”
Schweiker v. Hogan,
B. Violation of the OSHA Regulations
The Secretary charged Fairfield with violating two OSHA regulations related to safety programs and training:
• 29 C.F.R. § 1926.20(b)(1): “It shall be the responsibility of the employer to initiate and maintain such programs as may be necessary to comply with this part.”
• 29 C.F.R. § 1926.21(b)(2): “The employer shall instruct each employee in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions and the regulations applicable to his work environment to control or eliminate any hazards or other exposure to illness or injury.”
The § 1926.20(b)(1) violation was for “failing to establish policies or procedures related to the safe movement of employees across active roadways.” Fairfield II, at *2. The § 1926.21(b)(2) violation was for “failing to instruct its employees exposed to vehicular traffic when crossing a major interstate as to a safe means of access to medians and the opposite side of the road.” Id. Stated simply, one citation was for not making the proper policies, and the other was for not instructing employees on those policies.
*505 Neither Fairfield nor the amicus dispute the hazardous nature of crossing active roadways. Their myriad arguments may be distilled down to two primary contentions: (1) the Commission erred by applying the regulations in an unconstitutionally arbitrary manner and without reference to industry standards; and (2) the Commission erred by requiring training about the obvious hazard of crossing an active roadway on foot.
1. Arbitrary Application and Industry Standards
Fairfield argues that a reasonably prudent employer would not have known that the OSHA regulations required training employees about the hazards of crossing an active roadway. As support, Fairfield notes that all three Commissioners agreed that the Secretary failed to prove either that Fairfield fell below industry standards or that the entire highway construction industry was negligent. Fairfield’s argument is unpersuasive in light of the factual finding that it had actual knowledge about the common practice of employees crossing active roadways.
Under § 1926.20(b)(1), “an employer may reasonably be expected to conform its safety program to any known duties and ... a safety program must include those measures for detecting and correcting hazards which a reasonably prudent employer similarly situated would adopt.”
Northwood Stone & Asphalt, Inc.,
In interpreting such general standards, the court examines whether “ ‘a reasonable person,’ examining the generalized standard in light of a particular set of circumstances, can determine what is required,
or
if the particular employer was
actually aware
of the existence of a hazard and of a means by which to abate it.”
R & R Builders, Inc.,
1991 OSAHRC LEXIS 161, at *17 (O.S.H.R.C. Nov. 25, 1991),
The conjunction “or” is important. The Secretary need not prove a violation of industry standards if she proves actual knowledge of a hazard.
See Nelson Tree Services, Inc. v. OSHRC,
The ALJ found that Fairfield “knew that its employees, Mr. Wolfe included, regularly crossed lanes of interstate highways on foot.” Fairfield I, at *2. The compliance officer and a sheriffs deputy with extensive experience in highway safety opined that the proper practice should have been to forbid employees to cross multiple lane highways on foot. Id. *506 Although the Commission majority disagreed that an outright prohibition was the only alternative available, it noted that “[tjhree of Fairfield’s foremen agreed that the practice [of crossing the highway on foot] can be dangerous depending upon the circumstances. Indeed, Fairfield’s own employees testified that the company was aware of and sometimes utilized the potentially safer alternative of driving a vehicle to the opposite side of an active interstate highway.” Fairfield II, at *3. Fairfield did not restrict employee discretion regarding the proper method and timing for crossing active roadways beyond general warnings about staying aware of traffic. This amply illustrates Fairfield’s actual knowledge of a hazard it declined to address even in light of at least one known, feasible alternative.
Although Fairfield cites the general rule that industry-wide negligence must be proven, 4 it is conspicuously silent about whether such proof is necessary in light of actual knowledge of a hazard. It thus never directly disputes that the Commission majority could hold, with perfect consistency, both that the Secretary had failed to establish an industry custom regarding crossing active roadways, and that Fair-field’s actual knowledge of the hazard, and its failure to address that hazard in its safety program and employee training, violated the cited OSHA regulations. See Fairfield II, at *4 & n. 13.
Fairfield attempts to salvage its argument by contending that the Secretary can point to no source for the duty to institute programs and training for employees on crossing active roadways. The Secretary counters that the MUTCD — a federally revised and state-adopted manual that private companies are obligated to follow— provides an objective source for this duty.
The Secretary’s MUTCD argument, offered for the first time on appeal, is merely duplicative of the purpose of OSHA and the cited regulations, which require an employer to institute policies and training about known hazards.
See, e.g., Ray Evers,
Fairfield and the amicus argue that it is nearly impossible to discern exactly what kind training is required by the Commission’s ruling. For example, the amicus asks, “Is such training also necessary when employees might be crossing a busy, urban street? A suburban thoroughfare at rush hour? A limited access state highway in a rural area?”
This argument is unpersuasive. The Commission ruled that “[a]n employer’s obligation to instruct and train is dependent upon the specific conditions, whether
*507
those conditions create a hazard, and whether the employer or its industry has recognized the hazard.”
Fairfield II,
at *3. In other words, Fairfield should conduct its training on crossing roadways with a reasonableness standard in mind. We have recognized that general regulations are not constitutionally infirm on due process grounds so long as a reasonableness requirement is read into them.
See Ray Evers,
As one of the majority Commissioners noted, “there is no reason to believe that policies established to address ‘crossing an active roadway' will be any more burdensome or will be the object of more subjective application and enforcement than the policies or procedures now in place for ‘working around moving traffic.’ ” Fair-field II, at *4 n. 12. The Commission did not arbitrarily or capriciously find that Fairfield had actual knowledge of a hazard about which it should have provided guidance, and the Commission’s application of the OSHA regulations did not violate Fair-field’s due process rights.
2. Obviousness of the Hazard
Fairfield contends that its existing training was adequate because the OSHA regulations could not have required it to train experienced highway workers about the obvious hazard of crossing an interstate on foot. This argument, though superficially alluring, is unpersuasive.
“An employer’s instructions are not necessarily deficient just because they allow the employees discretion as to how to proceed, particularly where the working circumstances are such that no one form of protection is capable of being used every time.”
El Paso Crane and Rigging Co.,
Fairfield’s training involved admonishments regarding working near moving traffic. For example: “Think about the drivers on the road who will be passing through your work zone”; “Pay close attention to the traffic around you — make sure you watch out for that car because its driver may not be watching you”; “Make sure that you always know where you are and where the traffic is so that you don’t accidentally end up in an active lane.” Fairfield contends that it should not be further required to train employees “not to do what no reasonable person would ever do,” i.e., cross in front of rapidly moving vehicles. It likens instructions on such obvious hazards to two rulings in which the Fifth Circuit struck down requirements to place railings around flat roofs:
Diamond Roofing Co. v. OSHRC,
In
Diamond Roofing,
the court found that the Secretary could not use a regulation requiring railing around
floors
to apply to roofs. In dictum, the court noted that the roofing industry covers or guards roof holes but not roof perimeters because falling off “is an obvious danger of which roofers are highly conscious.”
Diamond Roofing,
Diamond Roofing and R.L. Sanders are inapposite. First, they reveal nothing about what kind of instructions an employer is required to give about known hazards. Second, and more importantly, they emphasize a kind of “obviousness” that is not at issue here.
There is no dispute that being struck by traffic (or falling off of a roof) is an obvious hazard. What’s at issue is whether the hazard of crossing an active roadway was so obvious that no instruction about doing so safely was required. Fairfield acknowledges that there are times when crossing an active highway is entirely unsafe, and that safer alternatives are sometimes available. Yet it allowed its employees to exercise unfettered discretion on when to cross on foot and never offered adequate guidance about how and when to do so.
As both sides note, the decedent, Wolfe, was an experienced highway worker with a history of sound judgment. The fact that he attempted to cross a road, as he and other employees had done in the past, in the face of credible testimony by two witnesses that doing so at the time was not safe, suggests that the dangers inherent in crossing an active roadway were not so obvious that employees would not have benefitted from systematic instruction.
This was not a freak accident, but one that could have been prevented with adequate guidance about when the crossing of the highway should not be attempted and when alternative means of crossing the road should be employed. As the Commission noted, the record reflects “at best, an inadequate and superficial treatment of a serious hazard.” Fairfield II, at *4. The Commission did not act arbitrarily or capriciously in finding that the hazard of crossing active roadways was not so obvious as to eliminate Fairfield’s duty to institute a safety program and training about it.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Fairfield asserts a violation of due process because the OSHA regulations did not provide fair warning that Fairfield was required to train employees about crossing active roadways, and because the Secretary was required to, and did not, present evidence of customary training in the highway construction industry before imposing the requirements. As to legal error, Fairfield asserts that OSHA regulations do not require a company to train about obvious hazards such as crossing active roadways on foot, and that the company should not be responsible when cautious, well-trained employees suffer from inexplicable accidents. The amicus contends that the Commission erred by affirming OSHA violations where, consistent with industry practice, the employer provided general guidance to its employees concerning an obvious hazard.
. The Secretary contends that "[a] determination that an employer failed to recognize that a condition to which its employees were exposed constituted a hazard that a reasonably prudent employer would have addressed in its accident-prevention and training programs is a factual one.” That statement is incorrect: the “reasonably prudent employer” standard is unequivocally legal. Fairfield admits that crossing a road can be hazardous and that it did not institute a policy or training to specifically address it; only the legal question of whether Fairfield was required to do so remains.
. The Federal Highway Commission revises the MUTCD and requires states to adopt a comparable MUTCD. Ohio has done so and private companies, such as Fairfield, are contractually required to comply with the state MUTCD. The Secretary contends that the MUTCD provides an objective source for the duty to instruct employees not to deviate from traffic control plans by, for example, leaving work zones to cross the highway. This is the first time the Secretary has made this argument and neither the ALJ nor the Commission discussed the MUTCD in affirming the OSHA violations.
. Fairfield relies primarily on the following quote: “Reasonableness is an objective test which must be determined on the basis of evidence in the record. Industry standards and customs are not entirely determinative of reasonableness because there may be instances where a whole industry has been negligent. ... However, such negligence on the part of a whole industry cannot be lightly presumed. It must be proven.”
Ray Evers Welding v. OSHRC,
