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OSHA's Monitoring and Evaluation of State Programs

T-HRD-88-13 Published: Apr 20, 1988. Publicly Released: Apr 20, 1988.
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Highlights

GAO discussed the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's (OSHA) efforts to: (1) monitor and evaluate state-operated safety and health programs; and (2) resume enforcement within the private sector in California. GAO found that OSHA: (1) lacked effective monitoring and evaluation procedures; (2) relied primarily on its computerized management information system to assess state program quality; (3) did not provide for the collection and analysis of information that directly related to state program quality; and (4) did not establish performance levels or incentives for states to use in attaining occupational and health safety. GAO also found that: (1) diversion of its staff resources to provide enforcement in California hampered OSHA inspection efforts nationwide; (2) OSHA occupational safety and health standards were limited in scope compared with California standards; (3) the number of safety and health inspections OSHA performed in California decreased because it was unable to fill staff positions; and (4) in 1988, total funding for worker protection activities in California decreased from $33 million to $16 million.

Recommendations

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status Sort descending
Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA should work with states to help them evaluate their programs' impact on worker safety and health.
Closed – Not Implemented
GAO is closing out the older recommendation because it is being repeated in a more recent product.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA should establish desired performance levels for use by state programs and consider providing incentives for states to attain them.
Closed – Not Implemented
GAO is closing out the older recommendations because they are being repeated in a more recent product.
Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA should require that states establish quality assurance programs and then periodically review those efforts.
Closed – Not Implemented
GAO is closing out the older recommendation because it is being repeated in a more recent product.

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Topics

state relationsMonitoringOccupational health and safety programsOccupational health standardsOccupational safetyProgram managementSafety regulationSafety standardsState-administered programsWorking conditions