as introduced - 81st Legislature (1999 - 2000) Posted on 12/15/2009 12:00am
1.1 A bill for an act 1.2 relating to occupational safety and health; modifying 1.3 certain safety committee requirements; amending 1.4 Minnesota Statutes 1998, section 182.676. 1.5 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA: 1.6 Section 1. Minnesota Statutes 1998, section 182.676, is 1.7 amended to read: 1.8 182.676 [SAFETY COMMITTEES.] 1.9 Every public or private employer of more than 25 employees 1.10 shall establish and administer a joint labor-management safety 1.11 committee. 1.12Every public or private employer of 25 or fewer employees1.13shall establish and administer a safety committee if:1.14(1) the employer has a lost workday cases incidence rate in1.15the top ten percent of all rates for employers in the same1.16industry; or1.17(2) the workers' compensation premium classification1.18assigned to the greatest portion of the payroll for the employer1.19has a pure premium rate as reported by the workers' compensation1.20rating association in the top 25 percent of premium rates for1.21all classes.1.22 Every public or private employer of 25 or fewer employees 1.23 shall establish and administer a safety committee if the 1.24 employer is in a standard industrial classification required to 1.25 comply with section 182.653, subdivision 8. 2.1 A safety committee must hold regularly scheduled meetings 2.2 unless otherwise provided in a collective bargaining agreement. 2.3 Employee safety committee members must be selected by 2.4 employees. An employer that fails to establish or administer a 2.5 safety committee as required by this section may be cited by the 2.6 commissioner. A citation is punishable as a serious violation 2.7 under section 182.666. 2.8 The commissioner may adopt rules necessary to implement 2.9 this section.