HAZMAT / OSHA
Workplace safety rights, the right to refuse dangerous work, and hazmat rules.
- Can I Be Fired for Reporting a Safety Violation? No — it is illegal. Section 11(c) of the OSH Act bars your employer from firing or punishing you for reporting a hazard, filing an OSHA complaint, or taking part in an inspection. But the deadline to file a retaliation complaint is short — just 30 days.
- Can I Refuse to Do Unsafe Work? Yes — you have the right to refuse work that would put you in real, imminent danger of death or serious harm. To be protected from retaliation, specific conditions must be met, but you should never have to risk serious injury on the job.
- How Do I File an OSHA Complaint? You can file a confidential complaint and request an OSHA inspection if you believe your workplace has a serious hazard. File online, by phone (800-321-OSHA), or by mail — and you can ask OSHA to keep your identity from your employer.
- What Are My Rights Handling Hazardous Materials? Your employer must keep you safe at no cost to you: they must provide and pay for required protective equipment, train you (including HAZWOPER training where it applies), and give you the safety information for the chemicals you handle. You also keep the right to refuse work that poses an imminent danger.
- What Workplace Safety Information Am I Entitled To? A lot. Under OSHA's Hazard Communication Standard ('right to know'), your employer must give you access to safety data sheets for hazardous chemicals — without you having to ask — plus training, and the right to see the workplace injury log.
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