OSHA Issues Rule for Workplace Exposure to Chromium

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration on Thursday issued a new regulation for employer notification of exposure to hexavalent chromium, considered a cancer-causing chemical by the State of California and made infamous by Erin Brockovich.

The new rule, mandated by the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2003, requires employers to notify their workers about exposure to any amount of hexavalent chromium. OSHA released a rule in 2006 and was told by the court to reconsider a requirement that chromium exposure must exceed the permissible level before workers are notified. The agency will take public comments for 30 days; if no major concerns are raised, the new rule will take effect June 15.

Here’s OSHA’s announcement.

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