Organization: PCA

MCAA/MILWAUKEE TOOL 2021 Safety Professional of the Year Award Nominations Deadline Extended

At the request of members and local affiliate executives, the deadline for MCAA/MILWAUKEE TOOL Safety Professional of the Year award nominations has been extended until Friday, December 17, 2021. The award is presented annually to a mechanical industry safety and health professional who has led his or her company to achieving an exceptionally high degree of safety excellence.

The award winner for 2021 will be announced during MCAA’s 2022 Safety Directors’ Conference. This year the winner will also be invited to the MCAA22 convention in San Diego, CA in March to receive the award on stage during the Awards of Excellence Breakfast. Airfare, lodging and registration will all be complimentary.

To nominate someone from your company, or from another company, to become the 2021 MCAA/MILWAUKEE TOOL Safety Professional of the Year, please complete the nomination form and e-mail it to MCAA’s Executive Director of Safety, Health, and Risk Management, Raffi Elchemmas, at raffi@mcaa.org by close of business on Friday, December 17, 2021.

BJ Baker III Steps Down As Baker Group CEO, Gary Bridgewater & Doug Kumm Promoted

MCAA Member Baker Group announced that BJ Baker III stepped down as Chief Executive Officer on December 6, 2021. BJ’s innovations during more than 45 years with the company, including 38 years as CEO, have shaped Baker Group into an industry leading specialty contractor. He will continue as the Chair of the Baker Group Board of Directors and remain an active member of the leadership team. Gary Bridgewater will become Baker Group’s new CEO and Doug Kumm will fill the role of President.

BJ grew up in the mechanical design and construction business, the son of founder Bernard “Bernie” Baker, Jr., and has served in a variety of roles since 1977. BJ has fond memories of Bernie’s tireless work in building Baker Mechanical, Inc. into what is now Baker Group.

Since assuming leadership of Baker Group, BJ has overseen tremendous growth. In the last decade alone, the company has grown from 279 employees, to over 900 employees. In a move that highlights his appreciation for the Baker Group workforce, he sold the company to its employees in 2019. BJ says the move was designed to ensure a strong future for everyone at Baker Group.

“My father built this company on a foundation of working hard and working smart, with client-centered core values that our employees emulate every day,” BJ says. “I am grateful to have learned so much from him, to have followed in his footsteps, and to have built this company to serve our community for generations to come.”

BJ learned the core value of caring for people at an early age in watching his father work. His approach to leadership is service-oriented, and he has relished his role as a philanthropist in the Des Moines area. BJ has provided significant gifts to organizations including the Boys and Girls Club, Baker House, Taylor House, Blank Children’s Hospital, ChildServe and more.

Gary Bridgewater will become Baker Group’s new CEO. Gary has worked closely with BJ for more than three decades and his selection is the culmination of a thorough succession planning process. Gary Bridgewater has served as Baker Group President for the last 16 years and is exceptionally qualified to lead the organization in accordance with its core values. Doug Kumm, who has more than 32 years of experience at Baker Group, will fill the role of President.

As the Chair of the Board of Directors, BJ will remain active at Baker Group, continuing to contribute to the vision and strategy of the organization. “Baker Group is poised for success through this transition,” BJ says. “I’m confident and proud of this experienced leadership team, and I’m grateful to our employees who have worked so hard and helped us achieve so much. I’m also thankful for our clients, vendor partners, colleagues and the Board of Directors for their continued support.”

Baker Group is a commercial and industrial specialty contractor based in Ankeny, Iowa. With more than 900 employees, Baker Group is the Midwest’s premier full-service specialty contractor providing mechanical, industrial, sheet metal, electrical, building automation, process automation, security systems, fire alarm systems, parking/revenue controls and 24/7/365 service. For more information, call 855.262.4000 or visit www.thebakergroup.com.

Don’t Miss the Latest Information & Innovations at the Safety Directors’ Conference

Safety and health professionals are registering for MCAA’s 19th annual Safety Directors’ Conference in record numbers. Don’t miss out! Join them at Disney World in Orlando, FL, January 18 – 20, 2022, to: 

  • Get the latest information on the current state of the OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) from Lauren Rayner Davis from Peckar & Abramson, P.C.
  • Explore the newest safety innovations from MILWAUKEE TOOL, Tyfoom, DEWALT, and Victaulic during the exhibit.
  • Hear from Olympic Skier and Best Selling Author Vince Poscente on Radical Safety, a zero incident mindset.

You won’t want to miss it! Check out the video and explore the event brochure to learn more. Better yet, click the register button and sign up today! We look forward to seeing you there!

Marking Services Inc. Makes Hospital’s Documents Easily Accessible, Saving Money and Ensuring Regulatory Compliance

AIM Mobile Technology and Field Implementation Services from Marking Services Inc. (MSI) allow Boston Children’s Hospital (BCH) to keep track of documents for thousands of facility assets—which not only helps them comply with rigorous requirements for health care institutions but also saved money by ensuring easy access to warranty information for a failing piece of equipment. The move from paper to digital helps the hospital provide care that aligns with best practices.

Looking for More Smart Solutions?

Visit the Smart Solutions Case Studies area of our website! You’ll see how other mechanical contractors found their win-win with productivity-enhancing and cost-saving applications from members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Plus, you’ll find tips and ideas on other ways you and your company can save money and enhance your productivity.

Find the Latest from Hilti, Inc. and LaborChart in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show

MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show connects our contractor members with the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new products, product lines, services, solutions or web pages of particular interest. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

Hilti, Inc.
Gone are the days of sitting under the anchor point and rotating the threaded rod into place. Kwik Cast Connect (KCC) anchors are ideal for contractors installing pre-assembled hanger assemblies, allowing users to push the threaded rod into the anchor for quick and easy installation.

LaborChart
LaborChart was built to simplify workforce management. We took the most common resource management solutions—spreadsheets, whiteboards and databases—and developed an all-in-one platform for contractors around the world.

Need Something Else?

Find many more smart solutions in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show!

Speaking of Smart Solutions

Visit the Smart Solutions Case Studies area of our website to learn how other mechanical contractors found their win-win with cost-saving and productivity-enhancing applications from members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

This section of our website also includes tips and ideas to help your company save money and enhance your productivity. Don’t miss it!

MCAA Offers Materials to Prepare You in the Event the Stay on OSHA’s ETS on COVID-19 Is Lifted

The Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) issued an Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) on COVID-19 on November 5, 2021. While the standard has been temporarily stayed by the Fifth Circuit, MCAA wants to help mechanical construction, service, and fabrication shop employers prepare in the unlikely event the stay is temporarily lifted and OSHA decides to initiative enforcement. To that end, we’ve prepared this Safety Bulletin offering a quick overview of potential impacts and a Model COVID-19 Mandatory Vaccination Policy. Both are now available free to members as a benefit of membership.

MCAA is closely monitoring the daily changes and legal challenges to the ETS and while we don’t believe the stay will be lifted anytime soon, we want you to be prepared just in case.

If you have questions, please contact Raffi Elchemmas, MCAA’s Executive Director of Safety, Health and Risk Management.

Michele Hoffman Will Join the MCAA Staff

MCAA extends a warm welcome to Michele Hoffman, who will be joining the staff starting January 1, 2022. She will be MCAA’s new Director, Career Development as Megan Walsh moves back to full time responsibilities in the Events Department. Michele comes to us from MCA-Omaha, where she spent 13 years working with their local board and committees, and in event management and communications roles. During that time, she served as the Industry Advisor for the University of Nebraska Student Chapter, which was named MCAA Student Chapter of the Year in 2015, 2019, and 2020. She has been a member of MCAA’s Career Development Committee since 2018. Michele is originally from central Illinois, a graduate from the University of Nebraska–Lincoln (Advertising Major), and currently resides in Omaha. MCAA is pleased to welcome Michele to the staff, and her husband Eric and their two children to the MCAA staff family.

Washington Policy Update

MCAA offers a capsule digest of some key public policy, legislative, and regulatory developments in Washington, D.C., that will influence the MCAA policy agenda in the near and intermediate terms.

Good News from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) 

With the infusion of some $85 billion or more for the PBGC Special Financial Assistance Program, slated to provide  30 years of pension benefit payment to some 250 eligible multiemployer plans covering upwards of 3 million participants and their families, the PBGC’s 2021 Annual Performance and Financial Report issued on November 15th,  PBGC Director Peter Hartogensis proudly declares:

“Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 marks a significant milestone for PBGC’s Multiemployer Program with the enactment of the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARP).  Prior to enactment of ARP, PBGC’s Multiemployer Program was expected to run out of money by 2026.  ARP’s’ Special Financial Assistance (SFA) Program will significantly extend the solvency of the Multiemployer Program by at least thirty years.  While future reforms would help improve the long-term health and resilience of the multiemployer system, ARP has provided a financial lifeline, and the effects of that are clear. [Emphasis added.]

“For the first time in almost twenty years, both PBGC’s Multiemployer Program and Single Employer Program have a positive net position at fiscal year-end  The Multiemployer Program’s positive net position of $481 million at the end of FY 2021 is in sharp contrast to the negative net position of $63.7 billion at the end of FY 2020, a drastic improvement of $64.2 billion.  PBGC’s Single-Employer Program remains financially healthy with a positive net position of $30.9 billion at the end of FY 2021, compared to $15.5 billion at the end of FY 2020, an improvement of $15.4 billion.”

The ARP cash infusion in to the PBGC SFA program has taken great pressure off PBGC and the multiemployer system as a whole, avoiding the broadly negative cascading effects of large plan defaults that were looming over the system for many years.  Also, the sentence highlighted above with PBGC referring to even further future reforms – like Composite Plans long supported by MCAA, along with perhaps broadly expanded variable benefit plans – would bolster further the sustainability of the system overall for the mutual  benefit of plan participants and beneficiaries and contributing employers.  Those future reforms will now most likely be pushed into next year (maybe – as many view the PBGC SFA program as the last word on pension reform for some time) in Congress as the end of year legislating is compressed by a tight schedule and pressing funding and budget matters.

Other Good News in Pension Matters

The UA National Pension Fund annual funding notice issued October 19, 2021, for the Plan Year (PY) ending June 30, 2021, announced  that for PY July 1, 2021, the fund is certified in “safe” status with a funding percentage of 87.3% .  That Fund is no longer in “endangered” status.

Infrastructure Bill Signing

Coincident with the signing of the bipartisan infrastructure bill on November 15, the Biden Administration issued an Executive Order (EO) Establishing Priorities and Task Force for Implementation of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law “to coordinate the law’s effective Implementation.”  The EO Includes three priorities that are particularly relevant for MCAA member firm competitiveness in these new markets:

  1. Invest public dollars efficiently, avoid waste, and focus on measurable outcomes for the American people
  2. Buy American and increase the competitiveness of the U.S. economy, including through implementing the Act’s Made-in-America requirements and bolstering domestic manufacturing and manufacturing supply chains
  3. Create good-paying job opportunities for millions of Americans by focusing on high labor standards for these jobs, including prevailing wages and the free and fair chance to join a union

The EO creates an Infrastructure Implementation Task Force co-chaired by National Economic Council Director Brian Deese and White House Infrastructure Implementation Coordinator, Mitch Landrieu. Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Climate Policy Office, and a variety of Cabinet officials fill out the ranks of the group.

The prevailing wage requirements in the measure are broad, going beyond the usual direct Federal and federally assisted grant program projects and grant program and state prevailing wage policies in place for those types of projects. The requirements also extend to the bond financing provisions of the broad measure, and prevailing wage and apprenticeship utilization to qualify for the bonus rate on the green energy projects funded under the measure.  On the tax-exempt facility bonds, the measure “… applies Davis Bacon prevailing wage requirements to all proceeds of exempt facility bonds used for construction, alteration or repair of water furnishing facilities, sewage facilities, highway or surface freight transfer facilities, or zero-emissions vehicle infrastructure facilities.”

Industry Recognized Apprenticeship Programs (IRAPs) and Standards Recognition Entities (SREs) Proposed for Formal Rescission

The IRAPs and SREs put in place in the late stages of the Trump Administration are proposed  for formal rescission by the Biden Administration.  In a Federal Register notice posted November 15, 2021, the long-predicted demise of IRAPs is formally set in motion by the Biden Labor Department, with a regulatory notice seeking comments on the effects of the rescission of the IRAP program, which never was finally implemented.  Construction industry registered apprenticeship programs were granted an exemption from the operation of IRAPs and SREs in the final Trump Administration proposal, but the regulations permitted the expansion of IRAPs into construction in the future.  That possibility is now or soon will be foreclosed. 

OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) and EO 14042 Federal Contractor and Subcontractor Mandate Undergoing Court Challenge

The OSHA ETS that would compel employers with more than 100 employees to require COVID vaccinations or regular testing has been enjoined by a panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. It will undergo further hearing by the Sixth Circuit as a result of the multi-circuit lottery (unless moved) and is enjoined until further court action on the matter. 

The EO 14042 Federal contractor COVID vaccination mandate for firms working on direct Federal contracts and subcontracts of $250,000 is subject to court challenge in Federal courts in Florida, Texas, Georgia, and Missouri. As of November 17, 2021, no temporary or more permanent injunction has been issued against the EO. 

The court challenges to both actions are broad and, in some cases, different.  The OSHA ETS challenges focus on OSHA emergency authority broadly.  The challenge to EO 14042 focuses on the propriety of the Administration’s rulemaking implementing its proprietary action – whether the rules should have been issued by regular FAR public notice and comment rulemaking procedures, as opposed to the less formal Frequently Asked Question issuance of quasi regulations by the Safer Federal Workplace Task Force.  Among the four court challenges to the EO,  State of Texas v. Joseph R. Biden (Southern District of Texas, 21-cv-00309) is the furthest along, with a preliminary hearing held on November 16, 2021, and additional briefing in the matter called for on November 22, 2021. The initial preliminary hearing in State of Florida v. Bill Nelson (Middle District of Florida, 8:21-cv-02524-SDM-TGW) is slated for December 7, 2021. As of this writing, no dates have been set in the cases in Georgia or Missouri.

MCAA will continue to monitor the situation and provide reports as they are warranted. 

Resource Highlight: MCAA/CNA MICROLEARNING SAFETY VIDEO SERIES: Safe Lifting Technique to Help Prevent Musculoskeletal Injuries

Each week, MCAA will highlight one or more of the educational resources that are free to MCAA members as a benefit of membership. This week, we focus on the MCAA/CNA MICROLEARNING SAFETY VIDEO SERIES: Safe Lifting Technique to Help Prevent Musculoskeletal Injuries. This video will teach your pipefitters, plumbers, sprinklerfitters, welders, service technicians and fabrication shop workers how to protect themselves from the musculoskeletal injuries that occur when materials are improperly lifted and moved by hand.

Your workers will learn:

  • Why it’s important to warm up muscles
  • To assess how heavy and bulky the items are before lifting or moving them
  • To get help with items that are excessively heavy or bulky
  • Proper lifting technique
  • Proper turning technique
  • How to safely place an object down

Together with our partners in safety, CNA, MCAA developed the video, which is part of the MCAA/CNA Microlearning Safety Video Series, a series of easy-to-watch safety videos that are under 3-minutes long.

Watch for highlights of the other videos in this series in the coming weeks. They are also available in our Resource Center any time.

Have Questions or Need Personal Assistance?

Contact MCAA’s Raffi Elchemmas.

Find the Latest from Orbitalum and Manufacton by ViZZ Technologies in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show

MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show connects our contractor members with the members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

Participating companies highlight and link to new products, product lines, services, solutions or web pages of particular interest. Here are just a few of the recent additions:

Orbitalum
Orbitalum’s product line includes the industry leading GF series saws, RPG facers, Orbimat power supplies, and Orbiweld enclosed weld heads for precision stainless steel tube cutting, facing and welding.

Manufacton by ViZZ Technologies
Manufacton is a SaaS (mobile/web) platform that helps construction firms plan, track and manage both prefabrication and regular material handling. The Manufacton platform helps optimize the end-to-end prefabrication process.

Need Something Else?

Find many more smart solutions in MCAA’s Virtual Trade Show!

Speaking of Smart Solutions

Visit the Smart Solutions Case Studies area of our website to learn how other mechanical contractors found their win-win with cost-saving and productivity-enhancing applications from members of MCAA’s Manufacturer/Supplier Council.

This section of our website also includes tips and ideas to help your company save money and enhance your productivity. Don’t miss it!

5th Circuit Court Issues New Order Continuing Stay

On Friday, November 12, 2021, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit continued its stay on the implementation of the OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) on vaccine mandates and testing pending a full review of the request for a permanent injunction. It also directed OSHA to “take no steps to implement or enforce the mandate until further court order.” MCAA will continue to provide updates as the situation evolves.

Congratulations to Our Advanced Leadership Institute Course 21 Graduates

As MCAA resumed in-person programming this fall, industry leaders from across the nation gathered at Babson College for this year’s Advanced Leadership Institute. This cohort of executives from both the construction and service sectors studied strategic decision-making, managing organizational change, conflict resolution, and a whole lot more. After two intensive weeks of leadership education, Friday marked the graduation of the 21st Advanced Leadership Institute class.

In addition to their 70 hours of classroom instruction, participants conducted independent team research projects in which they tackled current issues facing mechanical contractors and developed best practices for approaching these challenges. And while they were at it, they built a network of peers and made new friendships that we hope will last for a very long time.

As they do every year, participants of the MCAA’s Advanced Leadership Institute wowed their professors with their enthusiasm and engagement. It is this commitment on the part of the participants that makes the ALI experience what it is meant to be – the premiere forum for growth and development of leaders in the mechanical industry.

Graduates of the Advanced Leadership Institute demonstrate time and again that people are what drive our industry to continued and future success. We congratulate the 2021 ALI graduating class, and are proud to continue to facilitate the investment that our member companies make in their leadership.

Admission to MCAA’s flagship educational program is highly competitive, and space is limited. The application for ALI Course 22 will be released in February of 2022. More information.

Resource Highlight: 2021 MCAA 3D Scanning Technology Research Report

Each week, MCAA will highlight one or more of the educational resources that are free to MCAA members as a benefit of membership. This week, we focus on MCAA’s 2021 3D Scanning Technology Research Report. The report assesses various laser, non-laser scanning and photogrammetric hardware and software tools used by mechanical contractors. MCAA members stand to benefit from these and other rapidly evolving technologies that can expedite work, increase precision and prevent mistakes.

In addition to scanning, the MCAA’s Construction Technology Research Series explores tracking, layout, design and fabrication technologies using BIM and other tools.

You Might Also Like These Resources

MCAA’s Innovative Technologies Initiative offers a wealth of resources and information for those interested in exploring new technologies. Visit the initiative’s web page to explore them all.

Have Questions or Need Personal Assistance?

Contact MCAA’s Sean McGuire.

Registration is Open for MCAA’s 2022 Safety Directors’ Conference

MCAA is ‘ALL IN’ for our 19th Annual Safety Directors’ Conference at Disney World in Orlando, Florida, January 18-20, 2022. This conference brings together hundreds of occupational safety and health professionals, MCAA local affiliate executives, United Association safety instructors, principals, owners, and others who have safety and health responsibility.

The conference includes:

20 Knowledgable Speakers
Several Hands-On Workshops
Team Building at EPCOT

PLUS The 2021 Safety Professional of the Year will be announced

We can’t wait to go ALL IN in 2022!

OSHA ETS on COVID-19 Stayed, Delaying Enforcement

On November 6, 2021, the attorneys general in ten states (Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Iowa) sued the Biden administration over the Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) on COVID-19 that would have been effective immediately. As anticipated, the ETS has been stayed by the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. MCAA members won’t have to worry about enforcement until the courts hear, and rule on, the lawsuits.

More than 65 Leading Contractors Presenting at MEP Innovation Conference

Innovation comes from hard work, grit and the successes and failures that go along with it. If you are fortunate, you can improve your processes from the trials and errors of your peers. The MEP Innovation Conference, powered by Trimble, has developed into the most in-depth conference on construction technology and innovation.

The conference is now a partnership with MCAA, NECA, and SMACNA and will bring in the best innovators from across the MEP spectrum to Tampa, Florida, January 24-26 2022. With the inclusion of over 65 MEP contractors as presenters, each session will present a case study from your peers on how they integrated the latest tools, technology, hardware, and software.

Registration is exclusive to MCAA/MSCA, NECA, and SMACNA members as well as their union affiliated partners.

Registration is open!

COVID restrictions have limited the capacity of this event and it will sell out fast.

SFW Task Force Provides Additional COVID-19 Workplace Safety Guidance for Federal Contractors and Subcontractors

The Safer Federal Workforce (SFW) Task Force issued more detailed compliance guidance for direct Federal prime contractors and subcontractors performing on direct Federal contracts subject to the COVID-19 employee vaccination mandates under the Biden Administration’s Executive Order 14042. Below is a MCAA summary of the “new” Frequently Asked Question guidance issued on November 1, 2021. They are marked “New” on the SFW Task Force website linked below.

Compliance

Q: What steps should a covered contractor take if a covered contractor employee refuses to be vaccinated?

Answer Summary – If the recalcitrant worker has not requested an accommodation, and no such request is pending, then the guidance says the employer should resort to the terms of their employee handbooks or applicable  bargaining agreements for the appropriate disciplinary steps. It refers to the progressive discipline procedures used for Federal personnel for example. During the pendency of the applicable process, the guidance suggests, the worker’s continued presence on the covered workplace must be in compliance with safety protocols for unvaccinated workers.

Q: What steps should an agency take if a covered contractor does not comply with the requirements in the Task Force’s Guidance for Federal Contractors and Subcontractors?

Answer Summary – The answer says the agency should work with contractors who are trying in good faith to meet compliance challenges. On the other hand,  the answer suggests, if the contractor is not taking steps to comply, the agency should consider significant actions, such as contract termination.

Vaccination and Safety Protocols

Q:  If a corporate affiliate of a covered contractor does not otherwise qualify as a covered contractor, are the employees of that affiliate considered contractor employees subject to COVID-19 workplace safety protocols for Federal contractors established through the Task Force Guidance?

Answer Summary – The answer says that if the two entities are in a joint control relation with each other or a third party, then employees of the non-covered affiliate are considered contractor employees when working at a covered worksite.

Q: If the workplace where a covered contractors employees perform work on or in connection with a covered contract is a location owned, leased, or otherwise controlled by a corporate affiliate of a covered contractor that does not otherwise qualify as a covered contractor under Task Force guidance, is the workplace considered a covered contractor workplace?

Answer Summary – Again, assuming a control relationship among the entities, if an employee of a covered contractor is likely to be present during the term of the covered contract at the 3rd party site, then that site is considered a covered contract workplace.

Q: If a covered contractor can access a covered contractor employee’s vaccination documentation, consistent with relevant privacy laws, does the covered contractor need to require the employee to show or provide documentation?

Answer Summary – No, the answer says, if the contractor can access the documentation directly through precious documentation responses, an employer vaccination program record, or a state immunization database.

Q: Do all requests for accommodation need to be resolved by the covered contractor by the time the covered contractor’s employees begin work on a covered contract or at a covered workplace?

Answer Summary – No, the answer says, if the accommodation requests are pending at that time, then the employer must require during the pendency of the resolution of the accommodation that the employee follow the workplace safety protocols for employees who are not fully vaccinated as per the SFW Guidance.

Q: When a covered contractor’s employees are not vaccinated because a covered contractor has provided the employee with an accommodation, what workplace safety protocols must the employee follow while in a Federal workplace?

Answer Summary – The affected agency will determine what protocols apply at that Federal worksite for unvaccinated workers. In general, the answer refers to masking, social distancing and testing procedures. However, the answer says it will amount to a fact-specific assessment by the agency with respect to the individual work circumstances, and notes that some circumstances may not be amenable to any such accommodation.  In any case, the answer states contractors that have unvaccinated workers onsite at a covered Federal worksite must notify the agency contracting officer of which employees have received an accommodation in lieu of vaccination to facilitate that fact-based determination.

Litigation Update

The Vaccination EO 14042 is under challenge by the State of Florida in a lawsuit for a temporary and permanent injunction filed in the US District Court for the Middle District of Florida last week. (State of Florida v. Bill Nelson, Administrator of NASA et al, 8:21-cv-2524, USDC MDFla., Tampa Division).

The complaint is a broad and vigorous challenge to the Administration’s use of the Federal Property and Administrative Services Act preamble authority to prescribe regulations to promote economy and efficiency of Federal contracts. The suit challenges that as a pretext to pursue otherwise inappropriate Federal public health policy.  The suit also challenges the SFW Task Force and OMB exercise of regulatory authority over the ordinary course of procurement regulations vested in the Federal Acquisition Regulatory Council.  The suit asserts the State of Florida’s direct interest in its various Federal contracts with NASA and GSA.

MCAA will report details of the litigation and the scope of any injunction when and if it is issued during the preliminary compliance period.  Also, as to the various compliance procedures and judgments contained in the SFW Task Force Guidance, employers should be aware that generally, collective bargaining over the effects of a new Federal law or regulation is a mandatory subject of bargaining and is not subject to unilateral management implementation. Also, the summary answers above are meant for general communication. The full and complete text of the Guidance should be consulted for complete compliance analysis and planning. However, it also should be noted that some flexible rule of reason compliance standards are suggested in the new FAQs.

OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard Released

On November 4, 2021, the OSHA Emergency Temporary Standard applicable to all employers with 100 or more employees was released. This ETS is separate and apart from the EO 14042 vaccination mandate that applies to Federal prime contractors and subcontractors irrespective of employment  numbers.  The OSHA ETS expressly states that its requirements do not apply to workplaces covered by EO 14042 mandates, as follows:

Which employers are covered by the ETS?

  • Private employers with 100 or more employees firm- or corporate-wide.
  • In states with OSHA-approved State Plans, state-and local-government employers, as well as private employers, with 100 or more employees will be covered by state occupational safety and health requirements.

Which workplaces are not covered by the ETS?

  • Workplaces covered under the Safer Federal Workforce Task Force COVID-19 Workplace Safety: Guidance for Federal Contractors and subcontractors; and
  • Settings where any employee provides healthcare services or healthcare support services when subject to the requirements of the Healthcare ETS (§ 1910.502).

White House Extends Vaccination Deadline Under EO 14042

Also, on November 4th release of the OSHA ETA, the White House briefing notice extended the vaccination deadline under EO 14042 to be concurrent with the ETS deadline – January 4, 2022 – beyond the original EO 14042 vaccination deadline of December 8, 2021, as follows:

Streamlining Implementation and Setting One Deadline Across Different Vaccination Requirements: The rules released today ensure employers know which requirements apply to which workplaces. Federal contractors may have some workplaces subject to requirements for federal contractors and other workplaces subject to the newly-released COVID-19 Vaccination and Testing ETS. To make it easy for all employers to comply with the requirements, the deadline for the federal contractor vaccination requirement will be aligned with those for the CMS rule and the ETS. Employees falling under the ETS, CMS, or federal contractor rules will need to have their final vaccination dose – either their second dose of Pfizer or Moderna, or single dose of Johnson & Johnson – by January 4, 2022. This will make it easier for employers to ensure their workforce is vaccinated, safe, and healthy, and ensure that federal contractors implement their requirements on the same timeline as other employers in their industries. And, the newly-released ETS will not be applied to workplaces subject to the federal contractor requirement or CMS rule, so employers will not have to track multiple vaccination requirements for the same employees.

OSHA Issues Highly Anticipated COVID-19 ETS

The Occupational Safety & Health Administration (OSHA) is issuing an Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) on COVID-19.

Summary:

  1. Employers with 100 or more employees must ensure that each of their workers is fully vaccinated by January 4th, 2022 or test for COVID-19 on at least a weekly basis.
  2. Employers do not have to pay for COVID-19 tests under the OSHA ETS but may be required to pay under other laws or collective bargaining agreements (CBAs).
  3. Employers must provide paid-time for employees to get vaccinated and any sick leave for employees who get side effects starting on December 5, 2021.
  4. Unvaccinated employees must wear a face mask in the workplace starting on December 5th.
  5. Employers must remove from the workplace any employee who receives a positive COVID-19 test or is diagnosed with COVID-19.
  6. This ETS is effective immediately, although all aspects of the standard, other than testing, are enforceable starting Dec. 5th, 2021. Testing requirements become enforceable starting Jan 4th, 2022.

Additional details:

New Vaccination Requirement for Employers With 100 or More Employees: OSHA is issuing a COVID-19 Vaccination and Testing Emergency Temporary Standard (ETS) to require employers with 100 or more employees to:

  • Get Their Employees Vaccinated by January 4th and Require Unvaccinated Employees to Produce a Negative Test on at Least a Weekly Basis: All covered employers must ensure that their employees have received the necessary shots to be fully vaccinated – either two doses of Pfizer or Moderna, or one dose of Johnson & Johnson – by January 4th. After that, all covered employers must ensure that any employees who have not received the necessary shots begin producing a verified negative test to their employer on at least a weekly basis, and they must remove from the workplace any employee who receives a positive COVID-19 test or is diagnosed with COVID-19 by a licensed health care provider. The ETS lays out the wide variety of tests that comply with the standard. Given that vaccines are safe, free, and the most effective way for workers to be protected from COVID-19 transmission at work, the ETS does not require employers to provide or pay for tests. Employers may be required to pay for testing because of other laws or collective bargaining agreements. 
  • Pay Employees for the Time it Takes to Get Vaccinated: All covered employers are required to provide paid-time for their employees to get vaccinated and, if needed, sick leave to recover from side effects experienced that keep them from working. 
  • Ensure All Unvaccinated Employees are Masked: All covered employers must ensure that unvaccinated employees wear a face mask while in the workplace. 
  • Other Requirements and Compliance Date: Employers are subject to requirements for reporting and recordkeeping that are spelled out in the detailed OSHA materials available here. While the testing requirement for unvaccinated workers will begin after January 4th, employers must be in compliance with all other requirements – such as providing paid-time for employees to get vaccinated and masking for unvaccinated workers – on December 5th. The Administration is calling on all employers to step up and make these changes as quickly as possible.

Additional information on the OSHA ETS website

MCAA & MILWAUKEE TOOL 2021 Safety Professional of the Year Award Now Accepting Nominations

MCAA is now accepting applications for the 2021 MCAA & MILWAUKEE TOOL Safety Professional of the Year award. The award is presented annually to a mechanical industry safety and health professional who has led his or her company to achieving an exceptionally high degree of safety excellence. The award winner for 2021 will be announced during MCAA’s 2022 Safety Directors’ Conference. 

This year the winner will also be invited to the MCAA22 convention in San Diego, CA in March to receive the award on stage during the Awards of Excellence Breakfast. Airfare, lodging and registration will all be complimentary.

To nominate someone from your company, or from another company, to become the 2021 MCAA & MILWAUKEE TOOL Safety Professional of the Year, please complete the nomination form and e-mail it to MCAA’s Executive Director of Safety, Health, and Risk Management, Raffi Elchemmas, at raffi@mcaa.org by close of business on December 13, 2021.

Register Now for MCAA’s 2022 Safety Directors’ Conference

MCAA is ‘ALL IN’ for our 19th annual Safety Directors’ Conference at Disney World in Orlando, Florida, January 18-20, 2022. This conference brings together hundreds of occupational safety and health professionals, MCAA local affiliate executives, United Association safety instructors, principals, owners, and others who have safety and health responsibility.

Additionally, this conference is open to our partners at NECA, TAUC, and SMACNA to attend and participate in. Over the three days you will hear from subject matter experts on safety, health, risk management, legal, and other topics. Also​, Captain Richard Phillips will be presenting on the Hijacking of the Maersk Alabama. ​We can’t wait to go ALL IN in 2022!