Or. Admin. R. 437-001-0015
The following definitions shall apply to OAR 437, unless the context requires otherwise:
(1) Abatement — Action by an employer to comply with a cited violation of the Oregon Safe Employment Act.
(2) Accepted disabling claims — Claims accepted for disabling occupational injuries or illnesses only. A disabling injury or illness entitles the worker to compensation for disability or fatality. This type of claim excludes temporary total disability suffered during the first three calendar days after the employee leaves work as a result of the injury unless the worker is an inpatient in a hospital.
(3) Accepted disabling claims rate — The ratio of accepted disabling claims to annual average employment, times 100. Claims and employment figures are based upon the best knowledge of the Department at the time the rate is calculated (ADCR = Number of claims times 100 divided by the number of employees).
(4) Act — The Oregon Safe Employment Act (ORS 654.001 to 654.295, 654.750 to 654.780, and 654.991).
(5) Administrator — The Administrator of the Oregon Occupational Safety and Health Division (Oregon OSHA).
(6) Affected employee — An employee who, in the course and scope of employment, may be or may have been exposed to a condition or practice described in a citation, order, application for an extension date, or variance.
(7) Agent of the employer — Any supervisor or person in charge or control of the work or place of employment including, but not limited to, any manager, superintendent, foreperson, or lead worker.
(8) Appeal — A written request for a hearing to contest a citation, notice or order, a proposed assessment of civil penalty, and the period of time fixed for correction of a violation, or any of these, by filing with Oregon OSHA, within 30 days after receipt of the citation, notice or order, a written request for a hearing before the Workers’ Compensation Board. Such a request need not be in any particular form, but must specify the alleged violation that is contested and the grounds upon which the employer considers the citation or proposed penalty or correction period unjust or unlawful.
(9) Audiometric zero — The lowest sound pressure level that the average young adult with normal hearing can hear.
(10) Board — The Workers’ Compensation Board created by ORS 656.712.
(11) Catastrophe — An accident in which two or more employees are fatally injured, or three or more employees are admitted to a hospital or to an equivalent medical facility.
(12) Citation — A document issued by Oregon OSHA according to ORS 654.071 to cite a violation. A citation may include a notice of penalty and a correction order.
(13) Complaint — A written or oral report from an employee, employee representative, or other person that an occupational safety or health violation may exist at a place of employment. A complaint may be classified as one of the following:
(a) Imminent danger.
(b) Serious.
(c) Other than serious.
(14) Compliance officer — A designated Oregon OSHA employee responsible for conducting inspections or investigations; identifying possible violations and hazards; proposing citations, penalties, and correction dates; and assisting employers and employees with information to correct violations and hazards.
(15) Comprehensive consultation — A consultation to cover the entire establishment and entails a physical hazard assessment evaluation and a review of records, written programs, and the employer’s illness and injury prevention plan. Comprehensive consultations include a written report by the provider including findings, recommendations, and the guidance necessary to resolve the problems noted in the report.
(16) Comprehensive inspection — A substantially complete inspection of the establishment. An inspection may be comprehensive even though, as a result of the exercise of professional judgment of the compliance officer, not all potentially hazardous conditions, operations, and practices within those areas are inspected. With the exception of an emphasis inspection, a programmed inspection defined in OAR 437-001-0057 is a comprehensive inspection.
(17) Consultant — A designated Oregon OSHA employee whose responsibility is to provide a full range of occupational safety and health assistance including, but not limited to, providing employers, employees, and other agency staff with information, advice, and recommendations on maintaining safe employment or a place of employment; on correcting violations or hazards; and on applicable occupational safety and health rules, techniques, devices, methods, practices, and development of safety and health programs.
(18) DART (Days Away, Restricted, or Transferred) — The number of lost workday injury and illness cases experienced by 100 full-time workers (DART rate = Number of lost workday cases times 200,000 divided by the number of employee hours worked).
Note: Lost workday cases include both days away from work and days of restricted time.
(19) Decibel (dB) — Unit of measurement of sound level. For purposes of this rule, decibels refer to the combined average of the readings at 2000, 3000, and 4000 Hz on the audiogram.
(20) Department — The Department of Consumer and Business Services.
(21) Director — The Director of the Department of Consumer and Business Services, or the director’s designee.
(22) Division — The Oregon Occupational Safety and Health (Oregon OSHA) Division of the Department of Consumer and Business Services.
(23) Emphasis Program — A special program that targets Oregon OSHA activity to industries that have a high potential for serious injuries or illnesses, according to national or state data.
(24) Employee — Any individual, including a minor, whether lawfully or unlawfully employed, who engages to furnish services for a remuneration, financial or otherwise, and who is subject to the direction and control of an employer, and includes:
(a) Salaried, elected and appointed officials of the state, state agencies, counties, cities, school districts, and other public corporations.
(b) Any person provided with workers’ compensation coverage as a subject worker under ORS Chapter 656, whether by operation of law or by election.
(25) Employee exposure record — A record of monitoring or measuring that contains qualitative or quantitative information indicative of employee exposures to toxic materials or harmful physical agents. This includes both individual exposure records and general research or statistical studies based on information collected from exposure records.
(26) Employee medical record — A record that contains information concerning the health status of an employee or employees exposed or potentially exposed to toxic materials or harmful physical agents. These records may include, but are not limited to:
(a) The results of medical examinations and tests;
(b) Any opinions or recommendations of a physician or other health professional concerning the health of an employee or employees; and
(c) Any employee medical complaints relating to workplace exposure. Employee medical records include both individual medical records and general research or statistical studies based on information collected from medical records.
(27) Employee representative — A bargaining unit representative, or an individual selected by employees, who serves as their spokesperson.
(28) Employer:
(a) Any person who has one or more employees, or
(b) Any sole proprietor or member of a partnership who elects workers’ compensation coverage as a subject worker according to ORS 656.128, or
(c) Any corporation in relation to the exposure of its corporate officers except for corporations without workers’ compensation coverage under ORS 656.128 and whose only employee is the sole owner of the corporation, or
(d) Any successor or assignee of an employer. For purposes of this definition and ORS 654.005(5)(c), a business or enterprise is substantially the same entity as the predecessor employer if:
(A) A majority of the current business or enterprise is owned by the former owners or their immediate family members, and
(B) One or more of the following criteria exist for both the current and predecessor business or other enterprise:
(i) Substantially the same type of business or enterprise.
(ii) Similar jobs and working conditions.
(iii) A majority of the machinery, equipment, facility, or methods of operation.
(iv) Similar product or service.
(v) A majority of the same supervisory personnel.
(vi) A majority of the same officers and directors.
Note: Not every element needs to be present for an employer to be a successor. The cumulative facts will determine the employer’s status.
(29) Employer representative — An individual selected by the employer, to serve as spokesperson or, in the absence of a selected spokesperson, the person in charge of the place of employment at the time of the inspection.
(30) Environmental exposure sampling – Sampling of the workplace environment, performed for a variety of reasons including identifying of contaminants and their sources, determining worker exposures, and checking the effectiveness of controls.
(31) Establishment — An establishment is a single physical location doing business, offering services, or having industrial operations. For activities where employees do not work at a single physical location, such as construction; transportation; communications, electric, gas, and sanitary services; and similar operations, the establishment is the main or branch office, terminal, station, etc. that either supervise such activities or are the base for personnel to carry out these activities.
(a) One location/multiple establishments. Normally, one business location has only one establishment. Under limited conditions, two or more separate businesses that share a single location are separate establishments. An employer may divide one location into two or more establishments only when:
(A) Each of the establishments represents a distinctly separate business;
(B) Each business is engaged in a different economic activity;
(C) Separate reports are routinely prepared for each establishment on the number of employees, their wages and salaries, sales or receipts, and other business information. For example, if an employer operates a construction company at the same location as a lumber yard, each business can be a separate establishment.
(b) Multiple locations/one establishment. Only under certain conditions. An employer may combine two or more physical locations into a single establishment only when:
(A) The employer operates the locations as a single business operation under common management;
(B) The locations are all near each other; and
(C) The employer keeps one set of business records for all the locations, such as records on the number of employees, their wages and salaries, sales or receipts, and other kinds of business information. For example, one manufacturing establishment might include the main plant, a warehouse a few blocks away, and an administrative services building across the street.
(c) Telecommuting from home. For employees who telecommute from home, the employee’s home is not a business establishment, and a separate 300 Log is not required. Employees who telecommute must be linked to one of the business’ establishments under 437-001-0700(15)(c).
(32) Farm operation — Any operation involved in the growing or harvesting of crops or the raising of livestock or poultry.
(33) Filed — A document is considered to have been filed on the date of postmark if mailed, or on the date of receipt, if transmitted by other means to Oregon OSHA, DCBS, or the WCB.
(34) First aid — Any one-time treatment and subsequent observation of minor scratches, cuts, burns, splinters, or similar injuries that do not ordinarily require medical care. Such one-time treatment and subsequent observation is considered first aid even though it is provided by a physician or registered professional personnel.
(35) Fixed place of employment — The entire facility maintained by an employer at one general location, and operations provided from that facility, regardless of the size or number of departments or buildings in the facility. For the purpose of determining repeat violations, fixed place of employment includes employers or owners engaged in construction activity who will be at a single worksite continuously for more than 24 months. Forest activities are excluded as are construction sites established for a period of 24 months or less.
(36) Hazard — A condition, practice, or act that could result in an injury or illness to an employee.
(37) Health hazard — Health hazards mean carcinogens, lead, silica, toxic metals and fumes, vapors or gases, toxic or highly corrosive liquids or chemicals, chemical sensitizers, pesticides, fungicides, solvents, biological agents, and harmful physical stress agents.
(38) Imminent danger — A condition, practice, or act that exists in any place of employment and could reasonably be expected to cause death or serious physical harm immediately.
(39) Injury or illness — An injury or illness is an abnormal condition or disorder. Injuries include cases such as, but not limited to, a cut, fracture, sprain, or amputation. Illnesses include both acute and chronic illnesses, such as, but not limited to, skin disease, respiratory disorder, or poisoning.
Note: Record injuries and illnesses only if they are new, work-related cases that meet one or more of the recording criteria.
ORS 654.025(2) & 656.726(4)
ORS 654.001 - 654.326, 654.412 - 654.423 & 654.991
OSHA 3-2023, amend filed 11/22/2023, effective 01/01/2024
OSHA 5-2018, amend filed 11/29/2018, effective 12/17/2018
OHSA 2-2015, f. 3-18-15, cert. ef. 1-1-16
OHSA 2-2012, f. 5-11-12, cert. ef. 7-1-12
OSHA 10-2009, f. & cert. ef. 10-5-09
OSHA 2-2009, f. 1-27-09, cert. ef. 2-3-09
OSHA 1-2008, f. 2-22-08, cert. ef. 3-1-08
OSHA 5-2007(Temp), f. & cert. ef. 9-5-07 thru 2-29-08
OSHA 7-2006, f. & cert. ef. 9-6-06
OSHA 6-2003, f. & cert. ef. 11-26-03
OSHA 7-2002, f. & cert. ef. 11-15-02
OSHA 11-2001, f. 9-14-01, cert. ef. 1-1-02
OSHA 4-2000, f. 4-14-00, cert. ef. 4-15-00
OSHA 11-1999(Temp), f. & cert. ef. 10-20-99 thru 4-14-00
OSHA 7-1999, f. & cert. ef. 7-15-99
OSHA 5-1998, f. & cert. ef. 10-15-98
OSHA 2-1996, f. & cert. ef. 6-13-96
OSHA 6-1994, f. & cert. ef. 9-30-94
OSHA 7-1992, f. 7-31-92, cert. ef. 10-1-92
OSHA 24-1990, f. & cert. ef. 10-10-90
OSHA 10-1990(Temp), f. & cert. ef. 5-31-90
APD 7-1988, f. 6-17-88, cert. ef. 7-1-74
APD 6-1987, f. 12-23-87, cert. ef. 1-1-88
WCD 9-1986, f. 10-7-86, cert. ef. 12-1-86
WCD 12-1984, f. 9-20-84, cert. ef. 11-1-84
WCD 2-1984, f. 3-2-84, cert. ef. 3-15-84
WCD 9-1983, f. & cert. ef. 11-15-83
WCD 6-1982, f. 6-28-82, cert. ef. 8-1-82
WCD 4-1981, f. 5-22-81, cert. ef. 7-1-81
WCD 7-1979, f. 8-20-79, cert. ef. 9-1-79
WCD 5-1978, f. 6-22-78, cert. ef. 8-15-78
WCB 8-1975, f. 8-5-75, cert. ef. 9-1-75
WCB 19-1974, f. 6-5-74, cert. ef. 7-1-74