83_FR_39505 83 FR 39351 - Limited Extension of Select Compliance Dates for Occupational Exposure to Beryllium in General Industry

83 FR 39351 - Limited Extension of Select Compliance Dates for Occupational Exposure to Beryllium in General Industry

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health Administration

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 154 (August 9, 2018)

Page Range39351-39360
FR Document2018-17106

With this final rule, OSHA is extending the compliance date for certain ancillary requirements of the general industry beryllium standard to December 12, 2018. This standard protects workers from the hazards of beryllium exposure. OSHA has determined that this final rule will maintain essential safety and health protections for workers while OSHA prepares a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to clarify specific provisions of the beryllium standard in accordance with a settlement agreement entered into with stakeholders. The December 12, 2018, compliance date affects only certain ancillary provisions, i.e., methods of compliance, beryllium work areas, regulated areas, personal protective clothing and equipment, hygiene areas and practices, housekeeping, communication of hazards, and recordkeeping.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 154 (Thursday, August 9, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 154 (Thursday, August 9, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 39351-39360]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-17106]


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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Occupational Safety and Health Administration

29 CFR Part 1910

[Docket ID OSHA-H005C-2006-0870]
RIN 1218-AD19


Limited Extension of Select Compliance Dates for Occupational 
Exposure to Beryllium in General Industry

AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Labor.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: With this final rule, OSHA is extending the compliance date 
for certain ancillary requirements of the general industry beryllium 
standard to December 12, 2018. This standard protects workers from the 
hazards of beryllium exposure. OSHA has determined that this final rule 
will maintain essential safety and health protections for workers while 
OSHA prepares a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to clarify 
specific provisions of the beryllium standard in accordance with a 
settlement agreement entered into with stakeholders. The December 12, 
2018, compliance date affects only certain ancillary provisions, i.e., 
methods of compliance, beryllium work areas, regulated areas, personal 
protective clothing and equipment, hygiene areas and practices, 
housekeeping, communication of hazards, and recordkeeping.

DATES: This rule is effective August 9, 2018.

ADDRESSES: For purposes of 28 U.S.C. 2112(a), OSHA designates Edmund 
Baird, Acting Associate Solicitor of Labor for Occupational Safety and 
Health, to receive petitions for review of the final rule. Contact the 
Acting Associate Solicitor at the Office of the Solicitor, Room S-4004, 
U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 
20210; telephone: (202) 693-5445.

Citation Method

    In the docket for the beryllium rulemaking, found at http://www.regulations.gov, every submission was assigned a document 
identification (ID) number that consists of the docket number (OSHA-
H005C-2006-0870) followed by an additional four-digit number. For 
example, the document ID number for OSHA's Preliminary Economic 
Analysis and Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is OSHA-H005C-
2006-0870-0426. Some document ID numbers include one or more 
attachments, such as the National Institute for Occupational Safety and 
Health (NIOSH) prehearing submission (see Document ID OSHA-H005C-2006-
0870-1671).
    When citing exhibits in the docket, OSHA includes the term 
``Document ID'' followed by the last four digits of the document ID 
number, the attachment number or other attachment identifier, if 
applicable, and page numbers (designated ``p.'' or ``Tr.'' for pages 
from a hearing transcript). In a citation that contains two or more 
document ID numbers, the document ID numbers are separated by 
semicolons.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: 

[[Page 39352]]

    Press inquiries: Mr. Frank Meilinger, OSHA Office of 
Communications; telephone: (202) 693-1999; email: 
[email protected].
    General information and technical inquiries: Mr. William Perry or 
Ms. Maureen Ruskin, Directorate of Standards and Guidance; telephone: 
(202) 693-1950; email: [email protected].
    Copies of this Federal Register document and news releases: 
Electronic copies of these documents are available at OSHA's web page 
at https://www.osha.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Explanation of Regulatory Action

A. Introduction

    This final rule extends the compliance date to December 12, 2018, 
for certain ancillary provisions of the beryllium rule for general 
industry, specifically provisions related to methods of compliance, 
beryllium work areas, regulated areas, personal protective clothing and 
equipment, hygiene areas and practices, housekeeping, communication of 
hazards, and recordkeeping. This rule does not affect the new 
permissible exposure limits (PELs) for general industry, construction, 
and shipyards or the general industry provisions for exposure 
assessment, respiratory protection, medical surveillance, and medical 
removal, which OSHA began enforcing on May 11, 2018. This final rule 
also does not affect the March 11, 2019, compliance date for the 
provisions on change rooms and showers in paragraph (i) (hygiene areas 
and practices) or the March 10, 2020, compliance date for 
implementation of the engineering controls required by paragraph (f) 
(methods of compliance). Finally, this rule does not affect the 
applicability of paragraph (a) (scope and application) or paragraph (b) 
(definitions). (Document ID 2156). OSHA has determined that this final 
rule will maintain essential safety and health protections for workers 
while OSHA prepares a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to clarify 
specific provisions of the beryllium standard in accordance with a 
settlement agreement entered into with stakeholders. The revisions that 
OSHA plans to propose are designed to enhance worker protections by 
ensuring that the rule is well-understood and compliance is simple and 
straightforward.

B. Summary of Economic Impact

    OSHA has determined that this final rule is not economically 
significant. The rule revises 29 CFR 1910.1024(o)(2) to extend the 
deadline for compliance with certain provisions of the general industry 
beryllium standard until December 12, 2018. OSHA's final economic 
analysis shows that this compliance date extension will result in a net 
cost savings for the affected industries. At a 3 percent discount rate 
over 10 years, the extension will result in net annual cost savings of 
$0.76 million per year; at a discount rate of 7 percent over 10 years, 
the net annual cost savings is $1.73 million per year. When the 
Department uses a perpetual time horizon, the annualized cost savings 
of the final rule is $1.65 million with a 7 percent discount rate. The 
detailed final economic analysis, which includes more information on 
OSHA's cost/cost savings estimates for this final rule, can be found in 
the ``Agency Determinations'' section of this preamble. The rule is 
also an Executive Order (E.O.) 13771 deregulatory action.

C. Regulatory Background

    OSHA published a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) for 
occupational exposure to beryllium in the Federal Register on August 7, 
2015. (80 FR 47566). In the NPRM, the agency made a preliminary 
determination that employees exposed to beryllium and beryllium 
compounds at the previous PEL faced a significant risk to their health 
and that promulgating the NPRM's proposed standard would substantially 
reduce that risk. The NPRM invited interested stakeholders to submit 
comments on a variety of issues.
    OSHA held a public hearing in Washington, DC, on March 21 and 22, 
2016. The agency heard testimony from a number of organizations, 
including public health groups, industry representatives, and labor 
unions. Following the hearing, participants had an opportunity to 
submit additional evidence and data, as well as final briefs, 
arguments, and summations (Document ID 1756, Tr. 326).
    On January 9, 2017, after considering the entire record, OSHA 
issued a final rule with separate standards for general industry, 
shipyards, and construction, in order to tailor requirements to the 
circumstances found in these sectors. See 82 FR 2470. The general 
industry standard became effective on March 10, 2017, and the 
compliance date for most of the standard's provisions was March 12, 
2018. However, on March 2, 2018, OSHA issued a memorandum stating that 
no provisions of the general industry standard would be enforced until 
May 11, 2018.\1\ Two subsequent enforcement delays followed--the first, 
on May 9, 2018, delayed enforcement until June 25, 2018, of some of the 
general industry standard's ancillary provisions (related to methods of 
compliance, beryllium work areas, regulated areas, personal protective 
clothing and equipment, hygiene areas and practices, housekeeping, 
communication of hazards, and recordkeeping). The second delay, on June 
21, 2018, postponed enforcement of those provisions until August 9, 
2018.
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    \1\ On May 7, 2018, OSHA published a Direct Final Rule (DFR) 
which became effective July 6, 2018. (83 FR 19936; 83 FR 31045). The 
DFR clarified the definitions of ``beryllium work area,'' 
``emergency,'' ``dermal contact,'' and ``beryllium contamination.'' 
It also clarified OSHA's intent with respect to provisions for 
disposal and recycling of materials that contain or are contaminated 
with beryllium, and with respect to provisions that the agency 
intends to apply only where skin can be exposed to materials 
containing at least 0.1 percent beryllium by weight.
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    Following promulgation of the final rule in January 2017, several 
general industry employers, including Materion Corporation 
(``Materion''), challenged the rule in federal court. As part of a 
settlement agreement with Materion,\2\ OSHA is planning to propose 
revisions to certain provisions in the general industry standard and to 
rely on its de minimis policy while the rulemaking is pending so that 
employers may comply with the proposed revisions to the standard 
without risk of a citation.\3\ The revisions OSHA plans to propose 
under the settlement agreement are generally designed to clarify the 
standard in response to stakeholder questions or to simplify 
compliance, while in all cases maintaining a high degree of protection 
from the adverse health effects of beryllium exposure (Document ID 
2156).
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    \2\ The Materion settlement agreement can be viewed on 
regulations.gov (Document ID 2156): https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=OSHA-H005C-2006-0870-2156.
    \3\ The OSH Act allows the Secretary of Labor to prescribe 
procedures for issuing notices instead of citations for ``de minimis 
violations'' that have no direct or immediate relationship to safety 
or health. 29 U.S.C. 658(a). OSHA's de minimis policy is set forth 
in its Field Operations Manual, available at https://www.osha.gov/OshDoc/Directive_pdf/CPL_02-00-160.pdf. OSHA considers it a de 
minimis condition when an employer ``complies with a proposed OSHA 
standard or amendment or a consensus standard rather than with the 
standard in effect at the time of the inspection and the employer's 
action clearly provides equal or greater employee protection.'' De 
minimis conditions do not result in citations or penalties. See 29 
CFR 1903.15(c) (``Penalties shall not be proposed for de minimis 
violations which have no direct or immediate relationship to safety 
or health.''); See Employer Rights and Responsibilities Following a 
Federal OSHA Inspection, https://www.osha.gov/Publications/osha3000.pdf.
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D. Summary of Public Comments and Explanation of Final Action

    On June 1, 2018, OSHA published a proposed rule to extend the 
compliance

[[Page 39353]]

date to December 12, 2018 for certain ancillary requirements of the 
general industry beryllium standard. (83 FR 25536). OSHA explained that 
the proposed extension would give the agency time to prepare and 
publish a planned NPRM to amend the general industry standard before 
employers would be required to comply with certain ancillary provisions 
affected by that NPRM. That in turn would allow employers to comply 
with the proposed provisions without risk of a citation until any such 
changes are finalized (Document ID 2156).
    In the proposal, OSHA requested comments from the public on both 
the duration and scope of the proposed compliance date extension (83 FR 
25539). OSHA asked commenters to include a rationale for any concerns 
they had with the proposal, as well as for any alternatives they 
suggested. OSHA also requested comments on the ``Agency 
Determinations'' section of the proposal, including the preliminary 
economic analysis and other regulatory effects on employers and 
workers.
    OSHA received ten comments in response to the proposal (Document 
IDs 2159-2168). The comments generally focused on three issues arising 
from the proposed extension: (1) Whether to extend the compliance date, 
(2) the scope of any extension, and (3) the appropriate duration of any 
extension. Below we examine these three issues, in that order--by 
summarizing the comments and then explaining the agency's 
determinations based on the record as a whole. We then address two 
miscellaneous comments.
1. Extension of the Compliance Date for Certain Ancillary Provisions in 
the General Industry Standard
    Five commenters supported the agency's proposed extension of the 
compliance date for ancillary provisions affected by OSHA's 
forthcoming, substantive NPRM. (See Document ID 2161; 2165-2168). For 
example, Century Aluminum Company stated that ``the affected portions 
of the Standard should be delayed to allow OSHA time to prepare and 
publish the substantive proposed rule so that employers do not take 
unnecessary and costly measures.'' (Document ID 2165, p.1). It added 
that the proposed delay would also limit confusion among employers and 
other stakeholders. (Document ID 2165, p.1). Materion similarly 
observed that the proposed extension would address the concern that 
beginning enforcement of provisions affected by the NPRM could result 
in employer confusion or improper implementation of the relevant 
provisions of the rule. (Document ID 2161, p.2). Airborn Inc., Mead 
Metals, Inc., and the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) 
supported Materion's comments and registered their own support for the 
extension. (Document ID 2166, p.1; 2167, p.1; 2168, pp.1-2). These 
three stakeholders agreed that an extension is ``necessary to give OSHA 
enough time to draft and publish'' the forthcoming, substantive NPRM. 
(Document ID 2166, p.1; 2167, p.1; 2168, p.1). NAM added that the 
proposed extension was ``another positive step toward a more effective 
general industry standard for the benefit of workers.'' (Document ID 
2168, p.2). NAM also expressed its appreciation for ``OSHA's 
recognition of employers' reasonable and practical concerns regarding 
compliance in anticipation of [the forthcoming, substantive NPRM].'' 
(Document ID 2168, p.2).
    Four other commenters, the United Steelworkers (USW), Public 
Citizen, UNITE HERE! International Union (UNITE HERE), and the National 
Employment Law Project (NELP), opposed the proposed extension. 
(Document ID 2160; 2162-2164). These commenters argued that the 
extension would be unnecessary and unjustified, and would delay the 
implementation of important protections for workers. (See, e.g., 
Document ID 2160, pp. 1-2). For example, Public Citizen maintained that 
``[e]xpeditious implementation of the ancillary provisions in general 
industry is absolutely necessary to enhance the benefits of the newly 
adopted PEL, ultimately providing another level of protection in 
occupational settings.'' (Document ID 2162, p.3). It argued that 
delaying implementation would allow employers to continue to expose 
workers to unsafe levels of beryllium, ensuring ``the occurrence of 
even more cases of beryllium sensitization, chronic beryllium disease, 
. . . . lung cancer,'' and other adverse health effects. (Document ID 
2162, p.3).
    OSHA understands Public Citizen's concerns; the agency's goal is to 
protect the health and safety of workers. That is why OSHA has narrowly 
tailored the scope of the compliance date extension to cover only 
provisions that will be affected by the forthcoming, substantive NPRM. 
OSHA is enforcing, and will continue to enforce, many of the provisions 
that provide critical protection to general industry employees. This 
final rule does not affect critical worker protections afforded by 
enforcement of the revised lower PEL, the new short-term exposure limit 
(STEL), and requirements for exposure assessment, respiratory 
protection, medical surveillance, and medical removal.
    Moreover, in adopting this final rule, OSHA recognizes that the 
goal of worker protection can be frustrated where employers do not 
clearly understand OSHA's requirements or how to implement them. OSHA 
appreciates the concerns of those stakeholders who note that, until 
OSHA releases its planned NPRM, employers may lack clarity regarding 
how to implement and comply with the beryllium standard. OSHA has 
determined that it would be undesirable, for both the agency and those 
it regulates, to begin enforcement of certain ancillary provisions of 
the standard that will likely be affected by the upcoming rulemaking--a 
scenario that could result in employers taking unnecessary measures to 
comply with provisions to which OSHA intends to propose clarifications.
    NELP and Public Citizen also asserted that the proposed compliance-
date extension conflicted with OSHA's finding that a comprehensive 
standard is needed to protect workers exposed to beryllium. (Document 
ID 2162; 2163). OSHA disagrees with that assertion that this extension 
is in conflict with OSHA's findings. OSHA believes that a comprehensive 
standard is critically important for the protection of workers exposed 
to beryllium in general industry settings. However, the benefits of a 
comprehensive standard may not be fully realized where employers do not 
clearly understand, and have trouble implementing, its requirements. 
OSHA finds that this limited, short-term extension of the compliance 
date for certain ancillary requirements of the standard will give the 
agency the time necessary to ensure that employers have clear direction 
on how to protect workers exposed to beryllium. Additionally, as noted 
previously, OSHA will continue to maintain essential safety and health 
protections for workers through ongoing enforcement of many of the 
beryllium standard's key provisions. Enforcement of other OSHA 
standards, such as the Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR 1910.1200) 
and Access to Employee Exposure and Medical Records (29 CFR 1910.1020) 
will also provide other important protections for workers in general 
industry. In particular, employers are, and will remain, obligated to 
label hazardous chemicals containing beryllium, ensure that safety data 
sheets are readily available, and train workers on the hazards of 
beryllium in accordance with the Hazard Communication Standard. OSHA 
encourages employers to review their hazard communication programs,

[[Page 39354]]

employee training, and other hazard communication practices (such as 
workplace labeling) to ensure continued compliance with the Hazard 
Communication Standard.
    USW and UNITE HERE also questioned OSHA's justification for the 
proposed extension of compliance dates. USW objected to OSHA's 
preliminary determination that beginning enforcement of the ancillary 
provisions identified in the proposal before publication of the 
substantive NPRM could result in employer confusion or improper 
implementation of the relevant provisions of the rule. (Document ID 
2160, p.2). USW argued that employers could avoid confusion by 
complying with the revisions that are identified in the settlement 
agreement. (Document ID 2160, p.2). In addition, USW and UNITE HERE 
claimed that OSHA proposed this extension to ``demonstrate that it has 
taken deregulatory action.'' (Document ID 2160, p.2; 2164).
    OSHA does not agree with the USW that this extension of compliance 
dates is unnecessary because employers can rely on the regulatory 
revisions identified in the settlement agreement before publication of 
the substantive NPRM. The settlement agreement contains only a redlined 
version of the relevant regulatory text. It does not include a full 
summary and explanation of the revisions, in which OSHA explains the 
meaning of the proposed revisions to the regulatory text and, in some 
cases, provides further information and examples to aid compliance. For 
example, OSHA is planning to propose changes to paragraph (j)(3), to 
address reuse of beryllium-containing materials in addition to disposal 
and recycling, because in some cases materials may be directly reused 
without being recycled. In the summary and explanation for the proposed 
rule, OSHA will explain the intended meaning of the term ``reuse'' and 
the circumstances under which the cleaning and bagging requirements 
included in paragraph (j)(3) would apply to the reuse of materials that 
contain beryllium.
    OSHA also disagrees with USW and UNITE HERE's characterization of 
the rationale for this extension. Although OSHA noted in the proposal 
that the proposed extension was ``expected to be an . . . E.O.[ ] 13771 
deregulatory action,'' it included that statement to carry out its 
obligations under E.O. 13771, not to justify the rulemaking. As stated 
above, the reason for this rulemaking is to provide OSHA sufficient 
time to promulgate proposed clarifications to the general industry 
standard, so that employers can easily understand and properly 
implement the standard in order to keep workers healthy and safe.
    Based on the record as a whole, OSHA finds the arguments in favor 
of the proposed extension of compliance dates to be more persuasive 
than those against the proposal. Therefore, the agency has decided to 
adopt the proposed extension of compliance dates to allow time for the 
preparation and publication of the planned, substantive NPRM.
2. Scope of the Extension
    Having determined that an extension of the compliance date for 
certain ancillary provisions in the beryllium standard for general 
industry is appropriate, OSHA next addresses comments regarding which 
provisions will be included in the extension. In the NPRM, OSHA 
proposed extending the compliance date for the following provisions: 
Beryllium work areas and regulated areas (paragraph (e)), written 
exposure control plans (paragraph (f)(1)), personal protective clothing 
and equipment (paragraph (h)), hygiene areas and practices (paragraph 
(i) except for change rooms and showers), housekeeping (paragraph (j)), 
communication of hazards (paragraph (m)), and recordkeeping (paragraph 
(n)). OSHA requested comments on the proposed scope of the extension.
    Several commenters objected to the scope of the proposed 
compliance-date extension. For example, USW asserted that the 
underlying settlement agreement only ``affects beryllium products whose 
content is less [than] 1% by weight, but which does not generate 
exposures above the PEL.'' (Document ID 2160, p. 1). Therefore, USW 
argued, ``[t]here is no basis for staying ancillary provisions of the 
standard in workplaces where exposures to beryllium are above the 
PEL.'' (Document ID 2160, pp. 1-2). UNITE HERE also asserted that the 
proposed extension of compliance dates should be limited to provisions 
that OSHA intends to change. (Document ID 2164). It further argued that 
``there is no justification to delay any provision of the standard to 
the extent that it would regulate exposures above the PEL.'' (Document 
ID 2164). NELP similarly commented that the proposal was ``broad and 
needlessly pushes back compliance dates of important worker protections 
to a highly toxic substance.'' (Document ID 2163, p.1).
    Century Aluminum, however, argued that OSHA should not extend the 
compliance date for only certain portions of affected paragraphs, as 
proposed by some of the other commenters. Beyond making it clear that 
the compliance dates for engineering and work practice controls (March 
10, 2020) and change rooms and showers (March 11, 2019) remain 
unchanged, Century Aluminum asserted that differentiating by portions 
of affected paragraphs would lead to substantial confusion among 
employers and other stakeholders.\4\
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    \4\ Materion commented that the proposed extension of compliance 
dates did not cover all of the provisions that could be affected by 
the forthcoming, substantive NPRM. (Document ID 2161, p.1). 
Specifically, Materion noted that the NPRM could also affect the 
requirements for medical surveillance and change rooms. (Document ID 
2161, p.1 (citing Document ID 2156, Appendix B)). However, Materion 
did not ask OSHA to make any changes to the scope of the extension 
based on its comment. Rather, its comment appeared to serve as a 
recommendation to other employers to ``take careful note of the 
proposed changes identified in the settlement agreement, and to take 
them into account when implementing their compliance programs for 
medical surveillance and change rooms.'' (Document ID 2161, p.1). 
OSHA notes that, until the NPRM is published, employers may comply 
with the medical surveillance provisions as clarified by the 
definitions of ``CBD diagnostic center,'' ``chronic beryllium 
disease,'' and ``confirmed positive'' that OSHA has agreed to 
propose, which are available in the docket (Document ID 2156) and in 
OSHA's interim enforcement guidance (https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2018-05-09).
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    OSHA agrees with Century Aluminum's assessment that an extension of 
compliance dates that differentiated between individual subparagraphs 
of the affected ancillary provisions, as suggested by USW and UNITE 
HERE, would create substantial confusion.\5\ In addition, OSHA does not 
find that the extension should be limited to only those situations 
where beryllium exposures do not exceed the PEL. Contrary to USW's 
assertion, the substantive changes OSHA intends to propose to the 
beryllium standard for general industry do apply to processes that 
generate exposures above the PEL, and they are not limited to products 
whose beryllium content is less than one percent by weight. For 
example, changes to provisions for methods of compliance, personal 
protective clothing and equipment, housekeeping, and hygiene areas and 
practices involve all beryllium-containing materials where exposures 
may occur. Therefore,

[[Page 39355]]

OSHA's rationale for the extension of compliance dates applies to all 
general industry workplaces within the scope of the beryllium standard, 
including those where beryllium exposures may exceed the PEL. Finally, 
as to UNITE HERE's comment that the extension should be limited to 
provisions that OSHA intends to change in the final standard, OSHA has 
reexamined each of the provisions covered by the proposed extension and 
confirmed that the final extension of compliance dates applies only to 
paragraphs affected by the upcoming, substantive NPRM.
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    \5\ OSHA recognizes that three paragraphs, i.e., the paragraphs 
related to change rooms and showers in paragraph (i) and the 
requirement in paragraph (f)(2) for the implementation for 
engineering controls, have different compliance dates than those set 
for other paragraphs in paragraphs (i) and (f). However, this is a 
function of the way the compliance date provisions were structured 
in the January 9, 2017, final rule, and those dates were set based 
on specific findings made by the agency in that rulemaking. The 
agency believes employers have had ample notice of when the agency 
intends to begin enforcement of these particular provisions.
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    After considering these comments, OSHA has decided to retain the 
scope of the extension as proposed. The extension of compliance dates, 
therefore, will apply to the following provisions: Beryllium work areas 
and regulated areas (paragraph (e)), written exposure control plans 
(paragraph (f)(1)), personal protective clothing and equipment 
(paragraph (h)), hygiene areas and practices (paragraph (i) except for 
change rooms and showers), housekeeping (paragraph (j)), communication 
of hazards (paragraph (m)), and recordkeeping (paragraph (n)).
3. Duration of the Extension
    Having determined that it is appropriate to extend the compliance 
date for certain ancillary provisions in the general industry beryllium 
standard, the remaining issue is the duration of the extension. In the 
NPRM, OSHA proposed extending the relevant compliance date until 
December 12, 2018. OSHA requested comments on the duration of the 
extension.
    Very few commenters expressly opined on the duration of the 
proposed compliance date extension, and those who did disagreed as to 
whether a longer or shorter extension was appropriate. For example, 
Century Aluminum asked OSHA to consider extending the relevant 
compliance date for an additional three months, to March 11, 2019. 
(Document ID 2165, pp. 1-2). It argued that ``[a]n additional three 
months would give OSHA the time to receive comments on the substantive 
proposed rule and publish a final rule.'' (Document ID 2165, p.1). It 
further stated that a longer extension would prevent confusion and 
unnecessary costs:

    A delay until the substantive rulemaking is completed would also 
prevent a situation where employers comply with the de minimis 
policy, only to have to change practices if the final rule does not 
adopt all of the revisions in the proposed rule. The costs of such a 
midstream about-face could be significant. Moreover, aligning the 
compliance date with March 11, 2019, which is the compliance date 
for the change rooms and showers required by paragraph (i) of the 
Standard, would simplify compliance efforts and limit confusion 
among affected entities. Finally, the additional few months would 
allow state plans time to consider whether to adopt any revisions 
OSHA makes to the Standard without causing significant disruption in 
their respective states.

(Document ID 2165, p.2). USW and UNITE HERE, on the other hand, 
recommended that the proposed extension continue until thirty days 
after the substantive NPRM is issued or December 12, 2018, whichever 
comes first. USW maintained that the potentially shorter extension 
would allow time for employers to conform their practices to the 
content of the NPRM, while providing workers with necessary protections 
as soon as possible.
    After considering these comments, OSHA is not persuaded that it 
should alter the duration of the proposed extension. Although OSHA 
appreciates Century Aluminum's points, the agency must balance 
arguments in favor of a longer extension against the concerns raised by 
commenters, such as USW, that an unnecessarily lengthy extension could 
deny general industry workers certain protections afforded to them 
under the affected ancillary provisions. Moreover, although OSHA 
understands Century Aluminum's concern about the potential increase in 
costs that could result if the provisions adopted as a result of the 
planned substantive rulemaking do not mirror those proposed in the 
substantive NPRM, the agency cannot, at this time, estimate with much 
certainty when any final rule will be promulgated.\6\ OSHA also rejects 
USW and UNITE HERE's call for compliance dates based on the publication 
of the substantive NPRM; a timeline based on a currently uncertain date 
would be more difficult and confusing for employers and workers. The 
agency finds that the proposed compliance date of December 12, 2018, 
appropriately balances the concerns raised by stakeholders, will 
provide the agency sufficient time to draft and publish the NPRM, and 
will give employers sufficient time to comply. Therefore, OSHA has 
decided to extend the compliance date for the identified provisions 
until December 12, 2018, as proposed.
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    \6\ Although not suggested by Century Aluminum, OSHA also notes 
that an indefinite extension of compliance deadlines, i.e., a 
compliance date determined by the date the substantive rulemaking is 
completed, is likely to result in greater, not less, confusion.
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4. Miscellaneous Comments
    OSHA also received two comments that did not directly relate to the 
proposed extension of compliance dates. The first, from Materion, is 
related to a statement the agency made in the proposal. (Document ID 
2161, p.2). Specifically, OSHA stated that it ``expects to publish the 
planned, substantive NPRM well in advance of the compliance dates'' for 
change rooms and showers (March 11, 2019) and engineering controls 
(March 10, 2020). Materion maintained that ``it is reasonable and 
necessary for OSHA to not only publish the NPRM, but complete its final 
changes to the General Industry Standard for beryllium well ahead of 
March 11, 2019, since the revisions OSHA plans to propose are primarily 
clarifying or simplifying in nature . . . and designed to enhance 
worker protections by ensuring that the rule is well-understood and 
compliance is simple and straightforward.'' (Document ID 2161, p.2 
(citing Document ID 2156)). Materion further commented that 
``[e]mployees will benefit most by completion of all changes as soon as 
possible, and certainly before early 2019.'' (Document ID 2161, p.2).
    OSHA understands Materion's concern, and agrees that prompt 
finalization of any substantive revisions to the general industry 
standard for beryllium would be ideal. Therefore, the agency will 
proceed with the substantive rulemaking as expeditiously as possible. 
However, OSHA will also need to ensure that stakeholders have a 
meaningful opportunity to comment on the forthcoming proposal and that 
the agency has adequate time to consider and address stakeholder 
comments. Consequently, at this time the agency does not have a 
specific target date for conclusion of the substantive rulemaking.
    The second comment that was not directly related to the proposed 
extension of compliance dates was submitted by an anonymous commenter, 
who indicated strong support for the beryllium rule generally. 
(Document ID 2159). The commenter submitted summary statistics on 
relationships between beryllium exposure and the prevalence of 
beryllium sensitization and chronic beryllium disease in a cohort at a 
beryllium precision machining facility and stated that the results 
support the control of workplace beryllium exposures. However, this 
commenter did not address how the data or conclusions provided related 
to the proposed extension of compliance dates

[[Page 39356]]

or otherwise offer any comments on the specific terms of the proposed 
extension. To the extent that this commenter intended to argue that the 
proposed extension of compliance dates would have a detrimental impact 
on worker health, that comment is addressed above in response to 
similar concerns expressed by USW, Public Citizen, UNITE HERE, and 
NELP.

II. Agency Determinations

A. Final Economic Analysis and Regulatory Flexibility Certification

    Executive Orders 12866 and 13563, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 
U.S.C. 601-612), and the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 
1532(a)) require that OSHA estimate the benefits, costs, and net 
benefits of regulations, and analyze the effects of certain rules that 
OSHA promulgates. Executive Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of 
quantifying both costs and benefits, reducing costs, harmonizing rules, 
and promoting flexibility.
    This final rule is not an ``economically significant regulatory 
action'' under E.O. 12866 or UMRA, or a ``major rule'' under the 
Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.). Neither the benefits 
nor the costs of this final rule would exceed $100 million in any given 
year. This final rule to extend the compliance date for certain 
ancillary provisions in the beryllium standard would result in cost 
savings. Cost savings arise in this context because a delay in incurred 
costs for employers would allow them to invest the funds (and earn an 
expected return at the going interest rate) that would otherwise have 
been spent to comply with the beryllium standard. OSHA did not receive 
any comments on the preliminary economic analysis OSHA prepared for the 
proposal.
    At a discount rate of 3 percent, this final compliance-date 
extension yields annualized cost savings of $0.76 million per year for 
10 years. At a discount rate of 7 percent, this final rule yields an 
annualized cost savings of $1.73 million per year for 10 years. When 
the Department uses a perpetual time horizon to allow for cost 
comparisons under E.O. 13771 (82 FR 9339, Jan. 30, 2017), the 
annualized cost savings of this final compliance date extension are 
$1.65 million at a discount rate of 7 percent.
1. Changes to the Baseline: Updating to 2017 Dollars and Removing 
Familiarization Costs; Discussion of Overhead Costs
    More than one year has elapsed since promulgation of the beryllium 
standards on January 9, 2017, so OSHA has updated the projected costs 
for general industry contained in the final economic analysis that 
accompanied the rule from 2015 to 2017 dollars, using the latest 
Occupational Employment Statistics (OES) wage data (for 2016) and 
inflating them to 2017 dollars. Additionally, although familiarization 
costs were included in the cost estimates developed in the 2017 
economic analysis, OSHA expects that those costs have already been 
incurred by affected employers, and is excluding them from its analysis 
of the cost savings associated with this extension of compliance dates. 
Thus, baseline costs for this final economic analysis (FEA) are the 
projected costs from the 2017 economic analysis, updated to 2017 
dollars, less familiarization costs.
    OSHA notes that it did not include an overhead labor cost in the 
2017 analysis, and has not accounted for such costs in this FEA. There 
is not one broadly accepted overhead rate, and the use of overhead to 
estimate the marginal costs of labor raises a number of issues that 
should be addressed before applying overhead costs to analyze the cost 
implications of any specific regulation. There are several ways to look 
at the cost elements that fit the definition of overhead, and there is 
a range of overhead estimates currently used within the federal 
government--for example, the Environmental Protection Agency has used 
17 percent,\7\ and government contractors have reportedly used 50 
percent for on-site (i.e., company site) overhead.\8\ Some overhead 
costs, such as advertising and marketing, may be more closely 
correlated with output than with labor. Other overhead costs vary with 
the number of new employees. For example, rent or payroll processing 
costs may change little with the addition of 1 employee in a 500-
employee firm, but may change substantially with the addition of 100 
employees. If an employer is able to rearrange current employees' 
duties to implement a rule, then the marginal share of overhead costs, 
such as rent, insurance, and major office equipment (e.g., computers, 
printers, copiers), would be very difficult to measure with accuracy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ Cody Rice, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, ``Wage 
Rates for Economic Analyses of the Toxics Release Inventory 
Program,'' June 10, 2002 (document ID 2025). This analysis itself 
was based on a survey of several large chemical manufacturing 
plants: Heiden Associates, Final Report: A Study of Industry 
Compliance Costs Under the Final Comprehensive Assessment 
Information Rule, Prepared for the Chemical Manufacturers 
Association, December 14, 1989.
    \8\ Grant Thornton LLP, 2017 Government Contractor Survey, 
https://www.grantthornton.com/-/media/content-page-files/public-sector/pdfs/surveys/2018/2017-government-contractor-survey. 
According to Grant Thornton's 2017 Government Contractor Survey, on-
site rates are generally higher than off-site rates, because the on-
site overhead pool includes the facility-related expenses incurred 
by the company to house the employee, while no such expenses are 
incurred or allocated to the labor costs of direct charging 
personnel who work at the customer site.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    If OSHA had included an overhead rate when estimating the marginal 
cost of labor, without further analyzing an appropriate quantitative 
adjustment, and adopted for these purposes an overhead rate of 17 
percent on base wages, the cost savings of this final rule would 
increase to approximately $0.82 million per year, at a discount rate of 
3 percent, or to approximately $1.87 million per year, at a discount 
rate of 7 percent.\9\ The addition of 17-percent overhead on base wages 
would therefore increase cost savings by approximately 8 percent above 
the primary estimate at either discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ OSHA used an overhead rate of 17 percent on base wages in a 
sensitivity analysis in the final economic analysis (OSHA-2010-0034-
4247, p. VII-65) in support of the March 25, 2016, final respirable 
crystalline silica standards (81 FR 16286) and in the preliminary 
economic analysis in support of the June 27, 2017, beryllium 
proposal for the construction and shipyard sectors (82 FR 29201).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Changes to the Standard: Nine-Month Extension of the Compliance Date 
for Some Ancillary Provisions
    The general industry beryllium standard went into effect on May 20, 
2017, with most compliance obligations beginning on March 12, 2018. 
OSHA is finalizing the extension of the compliance date for specific 
provisions until December 12, 2018. The compliance date for the updated 
PELs, as well as for the exposure assessment, respiratory protection, 
medical surveillance, and medical removal requirements, and for 
provisions for which the standard already establishes compliance dates 
in 2019 and 2020, do not change as a result of this rule. The 
applicability of the scope and application paragraph and the 
definitions also do not change as a result of this rule, except that 
employers may comply with the definitions of ``CBD diagnostic center,'' 
``chronic beryllium disease,'' and ``confirmed positive'' that will be 
proposed in the later substantive rulemaking NPRM (Document ID 2156). 
The purpose of this final rule is to provide time for OSHA to issue a 
planned NPRM that will affect the parts of the standard that are 
covered by this compliance-date extension before that compliance date 
is reached, so that OSHA may rely on its de minimis policy and 
employers may

[[Page 39357]]

comply with the proposed provisions without risk of a citation.
    OSHA estimated the cost savings of the final rule relative to 
baseline costs, where baseline costs reflect the costs of compliance 
without the final rule's changes to the compliance date. OSHA 
calculated the cost savings by lagging the first-year costs for the 
affected provisions by nine months and then calculating the present 
value of the delayed costs over the 10 years following the new 
compliance date. Annualizing the present value of cost savings over ten 
years, the result is an annualized cost savings of $0.76 million per 
year at a discount rate of 3 percent, or $1.73 million per year at a 
discount rate of 7 percent. When the Department uses a perpetual time 
horizon to allow for cost comparisons under E.O. 13771, the annualized 
cost savings of this compliance date extension is $1.65 million at a 
discount rate of 7 percent.
    The undiscounted cost savings by provision and year are presented 
below in Table 1. As shown in Table 1, and described elsewhere in this 
final rule, the cost savings described in this FEA reflect savings only 
for provisions covered by the compliance date extension. OSHA estimated 
no cost savings for the PELs, exposure assessment, respiratory 
protection, medical surveillance, or medical removal provisions (as 
they are not covered by the extension), or for any provisions for which 
the rule already establishes compliance dates in 2019 (change rooms/
showers) or 2020 (engineering controls).\10\ The cost savings by year 
and discount rate are shown below in Table 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ Note that the labor costs associated with time spent 
changing clothes are generally triggered by wearing personal 
protective equipment, as required by paragraph (h) of the beryllium 
standard. OSHA is extending the compliance date for paragraph (h). 
Thus, employers will not incur the labor costs associated with 
changing time for personal protective equipment until December 12, 
2018, so OSHA is generally accounting for those cost savings in this 
FEA. OSHA has not accounted for any cost savings related to the use 
of head covers, however. Head covers may be used to prevent 
contamination of employees' hair, potentially precluding the need 
for showers under paragraph (i)(3) of the standard. Because this 
final rule does not extend the compliance date for showers, OSHA has 
not accounted for head covers for purposes of estimating the cost 
savings associated with this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Economic and Technological Feasibility
    In the final economic analysis for the 2017 general industry 
beryllium standard, OSHA concluded that the rule was technologically 
feasible. OSHA has determined that this final rule is also 
technologically feasible because it does not change any of the rule's 
substantive requirements, and, if adopted, would simply give employers 
more time to comply with some of the rule's ancillary requirements. 
Furthermore, OSHA previously concluded that the beryllium standard was 
economically feasible. As this final rule does not impose any new 
substantive requirements, and results in cost savings, OSHA has 
concluded that the final rule is also economically feasible.
4. Effects on Benefits
    The planned rulemaking to revise the general industry beryllium 
standard is intended to be responsive to questions and concerns 
expressed by stakeholders regarding ancillary provisions of the rule. 
Safety and health programs can be ineffective if employers and other 
stakeholders are unclear about OSHA requirements. Hence, by addressing 
stakeholder questions and concerns, the planned rulemaking will make it 
more likely that the regulated community will realize the full benefits 
of the rule, as estimated in the 2017 final economic analysis. Although 
it is not possible to quantify the effect of stakeholder uncertainty on 
the projected benefits of the rule, OSHA believes that the short-term 
loss of benefits associated with this extension of initial compliance 
dates will be more than offset in the long term by the benefits 
resulting from the agency's effort to clarify the rule. OSHA has 
determined that this final rule will maintain essential safety and 
health protections for workers.
5. Certification of No Significant Impact on a Substantial Number of 
Small Entities
    This final rule will result in cost savings for affected employers, 
and those savings fall below levels that could be said to have a 
significant positive economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.\11\ Therefore, OSHA certifies that this final rule does not 
have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ OSHA investigated whether the projected cost savings would 
exceed 1 percent of revenues or 5 percent of profits for small 
entities and very small entities for every industry. To determine if 
this was the case, OSHA returned to its original regulatory 
flexibility analysis (2017) for small entities and very small 
entities. OSHA found that the cost savings of this final rule are 
such a small percentage of revenues and profits for every affected 
industry that OSHA's criteria would not be exceeded for any 
industry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

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[[Page 39358]]

[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR09AU18.003

BILLING CODE 4510-26-C

[[Page 39359]]



                             Table 2--Cost Savings Due to Compliance Date Extension
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                   Undiscounted     Discounted      Discounted
                      Year                               t         costs by year     costs--3%       costs--7%
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                    Baseline
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1...............................................            1.00     $53,861,070     $52,292,301     $50,337,449
2...............................................            2.00      31,965,865      30,130,893      27,920,224
3...............................................            3.00      31,965,865      29,253,295      26,093,668
4...............................................            4.00      31,965,865      28,401,257      24,386,605
5...............................................            5.00      31,965,865      27,574,036      22,791,220
6...............................................            6.00      31,965,865      26,770,909      21,300,205
7...............................................            7.00      31,965,865      25,991,173      19,906,734
8...............................................            8.00      31,965,865      25,234,149      18,604,424
9...............................................            9.00      31,965,865      24,499,174      17,387,312
10..............................................           10.00      31,965,865      23,785,605      16,249,825
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
    Total.......................................  ..............  ..............     293,932,792     244,977,667
    Annualized--10 Years........................  ..............  ..............      34,457,890      34,879,308
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              Discounting Option 1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1...............................................            1.75      53,861,070      51,145,783      47,846,852
2...............................................            2.75      31,965,865      29,470,268      26,538,787
3...............................................            3.75      31,965,865      28,611,911      24,802,605
4...............................................            4.75      31,965,865      27,778,554      23,180,004
5...............................................            5.75      31,965,865      26,969,470      21,663,556
6...............................................            6.75      31,965,865      26,183,952      20,246,314
7...............................................            7.75      31,965,865      25,421,312      18,921,788
8...............................................            8.75      31,965,865      24,680,886      17,683,914
9...............................................            9.75      31,965,865      23,962,025      16,527,023
10..............................................           10.75      31,965,865      23,264,102      15,445,816
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
    Total.......................................  ..............  ..............     287,488,264     232,856,658
    Annualized--10 Years........................  ..............  ..............      33,702,395      33,153,550
                                                 ---------------------------------------------------------------
        Difference from Baseline................  ..............  ..............        -755,495      -1,725,759
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    This final rule does not change the information collections already 
approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). OMB approved the 
information collection request for the general industry beryllium 
standard under OMB Control Number 1218-0267, with an expiration date of 
April 30, 2020. OSHA received no comments on the information collection 
request in response to the proposal.

C. Federalism

    OSHA reviewed this final rule in accordance with the Executive 
Order on Federalism (E.O. 13132, 64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999)), which 
requires that Federal agencies, to the extent possible, refrain from 
limiting state policy options, consult with states prior to taking any 
actions that would restrict state policy options, and take such actions 
only when clear constitutional authority exists and the problem is 
national in scope. E.O. 13132 provides for preemption of state law only 
with the expressed consent of Congress. Federal agencies must limit any 
such preemption to the extent possible.
    Under Section 18 of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 
(OSH Act) (29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.), Congress expressly provides that 
states and U.S. territories may adopt, with Federal approval, a plan 
for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health 
standards. OSHA refers to such states and territories as ``State Plan 
States.'' Occupational safety and health standards developed by State 
Plan States must be at least as effective in providing safe and 
healthful employment and places of employment as the Federal standards. 
29 U.S.C. 667. Subject to these requirements, State Plan States are 
free to develop and enforce under state law their own requirements for 
safety and health standards.
    OSHA previously concluded from its analysis that promulgation of 
the beryllium standard complies with E.O. 13132 (82 FR at 2633). In 
states without an OSHA-approved State Plan, this final rule limits 
state policy options in the same manner as every standard promulgated 
by OSHA. For State Plan States, Section 18 of the OSH Act, as noted in 
the previous paragraph, permits State Plan States to develop and 
enforce their own beryllium standards provided these requirements are 
at least as effective in providing safe and healthful employment and 
places of employment as the requirements specified in this final rule.

D. State Plans

    When Federal OSHA promulgates a new standard or a more stringent 
amendment to an existing standard, State Plans must amend their 
standards to reflect the new standard or amendment, or show OSHA why 
such action is unnecessary, e.g., because an existing state standard 
covering this area is ``at least as effective'' as the new Federal 
standard or amendment (29 CFR 1953.5(a)). The state standard must be at 
least as effective as the final Federal rule. State Plans must adopt 
the Federal standard or complete their own standard within six months 
of the promulgation date of the final Federal rule. When OSHA 
promulgates a new standard or amendment that does not impose additional 
or more stringent requirements than an existing standard, State Plans 
do not have to amend their standards, although OSHA may encourage them 
to do so. The 21 states and 1 U.S. territory with OSHA-approved 
occupational safety and health plans covering the private sector and 
state and local governments are: Alaska,

[[Page 39360]]

Arizona, California, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, 
Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Puerto 
Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, 
and Wyoming. Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, New Jersey, New York, and 
the Virgin Islands have OSHA-approved State Plans that apply to state 
and local government employees only.
    The new amendments to OSHA's beryllium final rule do not impose any 
new requirements on employers. Accordingly, State Plans do not have to 
amend their standards to extend the compliance dates for their 
beryllium rules, but they may do so within the limits of this final 
rule.

E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    When OSHA issued the final rule establishing standards for 
occupational exposure to beryllium, it reviewed the rule according to 
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) 
and E.O. 13132 (64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999)). OSHA concluded that the 
final rule did not meet the definition of a ``Federal intergovernmental 
mandate'' under the UMRA because OSHA standards do not apply to state 
or local governments except in states that voluntarily adopt State 
Plans. OSHA further noted that the rule did not impose costs of over 
$100 million per year on the private sector. (82 FR at 2634.)
    As discussed above in Section II.A of this preamble, OSHA has 
determined that this extension does not impose any costs on private-
sector employers beyond those costs already identified in the final 
rule for beryllium in general industry. Because OSHA reviewed the total 
costs of the beryllium rule under UMRA, no further review of those 
costs is necessary. Therefore, for purposes of UMRA, OSHA certifies 
that this final rule does not mandate that state, local, or tribal 
governments adopt new, unfunded regulatory obligations of, or increase 
expenditures by the private sector by, more than $100 million in any 
year.

F. Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments

    OSHA reviewed this final rule in accordance with E.O. 13175 (65 FR 
67249) and determined that it does not have ``tribal implications'' as 
defined in that order. This rule does not have substantial direct 
effects on one or more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the 
Federal government and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities between the Federal government and Indian tribes.

G. Legal Considerations

    The purpose of the OSH Act is ``to assure so far as possible every 
working man and woman in the nation safe and healthful working 
conditions and to preserve our human resources.'' 29 U.S.C. 651(b). To 
achieve this goal, Congress authorized the Secretary of Labor to 
promulgate and enforce occupational safety and health standards. 29 
U.S.C. 654(b), 655(b). A safety or health standard is a standard 
``which requires conditions, or the adoption or use of one or more 
practices, means, methods, operations, or processes, reasonably 
necessary or appropriate to provide safe or healthful employment or 
places of employment.'' 29 U.S.C. 652(8). A standard is reasonably 
necessary or appropriate within the meaning of Section 652(8) when a 
significant risk of material harm exists in the workplace and the 
standard would substantially reduce or eliminate that workplace risk. 
See Indus. Union Dep't, AFL-CIO v. Am. Petroleum Inst., 448 U.S. 607 
(1980). In the beryllium rulemaking, OSHA made such a determination 
with respect to beryllium exposure in general industry (82 FR at 2479). 
This final rule does not impose any new requirements on employers. 
Therefore, this rule does not require an additional significant risk 
finding. See Edison Elec. Inst. v. OSHA, 849 F.2d 611, 620 (D.C. Cir. 
1988).
    In addition to materially reducing a significant risk, a health 
standard must be technologically and economically feasible. United 
Steelworkers of Am., AFL-CIO-CLC v. Marshall, 647 F.2d 1189, 1251 (D.C. 
Cir. 1980) (OSHA must reduce risk ``as far as it c[an] within the 
limits of [technological and economic] feasibility.''). A standard is 
technologically feasible when the protective measures it requires 
already exist, when available technology can bring the protective 
measures into existence, or when that technology is reasonably likely 
to develop. See Am. Textile Mfrs. Inst. v. OSHA, 452 U.S. 490, 513 
(1981); Am. Iron & Steel Inst. v. OSHA, 939 F.2d 975, 980 (D.C. Cir. 
1991). And a rule is economically feasible if it does not ``threaten 
massive dislocation to, or imperil the existence of, [an] industry.'' 
United Steelworkers, 647 F.2d at 1265 (internal citations and quotation 
marks omitted). In 2017, OSHA found the beryllium standard to be 
technologically and economically feasible. (82 FR at 2471). This final 
rule is technologically and economically feasible as well because it 
does not require employers to implement any additional protective 
measures and does not impose any additional costs on employers.

List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1910

    Beryllium, Occupational safety and health.

    Signed at Washington, DC, on August 6, 2018.
Loren Sweatt,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health.

Amendments to Standards

    For the reasons stated in the preamble of this final rule, OSHA 
amends 29 CFR part 1910 as follows:

PART 1910--OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH STANDARDS

Subpart Z--Toxic and Hazardous Substances

0
1. The authority citation for subpart Z of 29 CFR part 1910 is revised 
to read as follows:

    Authority:  29 U.S.C. 653, 655, 657; Secretary of Labor's Order 
No. 12-71 (36 FR 8754), 8-76 (41 FR 25059), 9-83 (48 FR 35736), 1-90 
(55 FR 9033), 6-96 (62 FR 111), 3-2000 (65 FR 50017), 5-2002 (67 FR 
65008), 5-2007 (72 FR 31160), 4-2010 (75 FR 55355), or 1-2012 (77 FR 
3912); 29 CFR part 1911; and 5 U.S.C. 553, as applicable.
    Section 1910.1030 also issued under Public Law 106-430, 114 
Stat. 1901. Section 1910.1201 also issued under 40 U.S.C. 5101 et 
seq.


0
2. Amend Sec.  1910.1024 by revising paragraph (o)(2) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  1910.1024   Beryllium.

* * * * *
    (o) * * *
    (2) Compliance dates. (i) Obligations contained in paragraphs (c), 
(d), (g), (k), and (l) of this standard: March 12, 2018;
    (ii) Change rooms and showers required by paragraph (i) of this 
standard: March 11, 2019;
    (iii) Engineering controls required by paragraph (f) of this 
standard: March 10, 2020; and
    (iv) All other obligations of this standard: December 12, 2018.
* * * * *

[FR Doc. 2018-17106 Filed 8-8-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4510-26-P



                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                        39351

                                              becoming subject to, an involuntary                     an AAR filed under section 6227(c)                    SUMMARY:   With this final rule, OSHA is
                                              petition for relief under title 11 of the               (prior to amendment by the BBA) or an                 extending the compliance date for
                                              United States Code; and                                 amended return of partnership income,                 certain ancillary requirements of the
                                                 (4) The partnership has sufficient                   as applicable.                                        general industry beryllium standard to
                                              assets, and reasonably anticipates                         (d) Eligible taxable year—(1) In                   December 12, 2018. This standard
                                              having sufficient assets, to pay a                      general. For purposes of this section, the            protects workers from the hazards of
                                              potential imputed underpayment with                     term eligible taxable year means any                  beryllium exposure. OSHA has
                                              respect to the partnership taxable year                 partnership taxable year beginning after              determined that this final rule will
                                              that may be determined under                            November 2, 2015 and before January 1,                maintain essential safety and health
                                              subchapter C of chapter 63 of the                       2018, except as provided in paragraph                 protections for workers while OSHA
                                              Internal Revenue Code as amended by                     (d)(2) of this section.                               prepares a Notice of Proposed
                                              the BBA; and                                               (2) Exception if AAR or amended                    Rulemaking (NPRM) to clarify specific
                                                 (F) A representation, signed under                   return filed or deemed filed.                         provisions of the beryllium standard in
                                              penalties of perjury, that the individual               Notwithstanding paragraph (d)(1) of this              accordance with a settlement agreement
                                              signing the statement is duly authorized                section, a partnership taxable year is not            entered into with stakeholders. The
                                              to make the election described in this                  an eligible taxable year for purposes of              December 12, 2018, compliance date
                                              paragraph (b) and that, to the best of the              this section if for the partnership taxable           affects only certain ancillary provisions,
                                              individual’s knowledge and belief, all of               year—                                                 i.e., methods of compliance, beryllium
                                              the information contained in the                           (i) The tax matters partner has filed an           work areas, regulated areas, personal
                                              statement is true, correct, and complete.               AAR under section 6227(c) (prior to                   protective clothing and equipment,
                                                 (iii) Notice of Administrative                       amendment by the BBA),                                hygiene areas and practices,
                                              Proceeding. Upon receipt of the election                   (ii) The partnership is deemed to have             housekeeping, communication of
                                              described in this paragraph (b), the IRS                filed an AAR under section 6227(c)                    hazards, and recordkeeping.
                                              will promptly mail a notice of                          (prior to the amendment by the BBA) in                DATES: This rule is effective August 9,
                                              administrative proceeding to the                        accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this              2018.
                                              partnership and the partnership                         section, or
                                              representative, as required under                          (iii) An amended return of                         ADDRESSES: For purposes of 28 U.S.C.
                                              section 6231(a)(1) as amended by the                    partnership income has been filed or                  2112(a), OSHA designates Edmund
                                              BBA. Notwithstanding the preceding                      has been deemed to be filed under                     Baird, Acting Associate Solicitor of
                                              sentence, the IRS will not mail the                     paragraph (c)(4) of this section.                     Labor for Occupational Safety and
                                              notice of administrative proceeding                        (e) Applicability date. These                      Health, to receive petitions for review of
                                              before the date that is 30 days after                   regulations are applicable to returns                 the final rule. Contact the Acting
                                              receipt of the election described in                    filed for partnership taxable years                   Associate Solicitor at the Office of the
                                              paragraph (b) of this section.                          beginning after November 2, 2015 and                  Solicitor, Room S–4004, U.S.
                                                 (c) Election for the purpose of filing               before January 1, 2018.                               Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
                                              an administrative adjustment request                                                                          Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210;
                                              (AAR) under section 6227 as amended                     § 301.9100–22T      [Removed]                         telephone: (202) 693–5445.
                                              by the BBA—(1) In general. A                            ■ Par. 5. Section 301.9100–22T is                     Citation Method
                                              partnership that has not been issued a                  removed.
                                              notice of selection for examination as                                                                           In the docket for the beryllium
                                                                                                      Kirsten Wielobob,                                     rulemaking, found at http://
                                              described in paragraph (b)(1) of this
                                              section may make an election with                       Deputy Commissioner for Services and                  www.regulations.gov, every submission
                                                                                                      Enforcement.                                          was assigned a document identification
                                              respect to a partnership return for an
                                              eligible taxable year for the purpose of                  Approved: July 20, 2018.                            (ID) number that consists of the docket
                                              filing an AAR under section 6227 as                     David J. Kautter,                                     number (OSHA–H005C–2006–0870)
                                              amended by the BBA. Once an election                    Assistant Secretary of the Treasury (Tax              followed by an additional four-digit
                                              under this paragraph (c) is made, all of                Policy).                                              number. For example, the document ID
                                              the amendments made by section 1101                     [FR Doc. 2018–17002 Filed 8–6–18; 4:15 pm]            number for OSHA’s Preliminary
                                              of the BBA, except section 6221(b) as                   BILLING CODE 4830–01–P                                Economic Analysis and Initial
                                              added by the BBA, apply with respect                                                                          Regulatory Flexibility Analysis is
                                              to the partnership taxable year for                                                                           OSHA–H005C–2006–0870–0426. Some
                                              which such election is made.                            DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                   document ID numbers include one or
                                                 (2) Time for making the election. No                                                                       more attachments, such as the National
                                              election under this paragraph (c) may be                Occupational Safety and Health                        Institute for Occupational Safety and
                                              made before January 1, 2018.                            Administration                                        Health (NIOSH) prehearing submission
                                                 (3) Form and manner of making an                                                                           (see Document ID OSHA–H005C–2006–
                                              election. An election under this                        29 CFR Part 1910                                      0870–1671).
                                              paragraph (c) must be made in the                                                                                When citing exhibits in the docket,
                                                                                                      [Docket ID OSHA–H005C–2006–0870]                      OSHA includes the term ‘‘Document
                                              manner prescribed by the IRS for that
                                              purpose in accordance with applicable                   RIN 1218–AD19                                         ID’’ followed by the last four digits of
                                              regulations, forms and instructions, and                                                                      the document ID number, the
                                              other guidance issued by the IRS.                       Limited Extension of Select                           attachment number or other attachment
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                                                 (4) Effect of filing an AAR before                   Compliance Dates for Occupational                     identifier, if applicable, and page
                                              January 1, 2018. Except in the case of                  Exposure to Beryllium in General                      numbers (designated ‘‘p.’’ or ‘‘Tr.’’ for
                                              an election made in accordance with                     Industry                                              pages from a hearing transcript). In a
                                              paragraph (b) of this section, an AAR                                                                         citation that contains two or more
                                                                                                      AGENCY:  Occupational Safety and Health
                                              filed on behalf of a partnership before                                                                       document ID numbers, the document ID
                                                                                                      Administration (OSHA), Labor.
                                              January 1, 2018, is deemed for purposes                                                                       numbers are separated by semicolons.
                                                                                                      ACTION: Final rule.
                                              of paragraph (d)(2) of this section, to be                                                                    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:



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                                              39352             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                                 Press inquiries: Mr. Frank Meilinger,                extend the deadline for compliance with               enforcement delays followed—the first,
                                              OSHA Office of Communications;                          certain provisions of the general                     on May 9, 2018, delayed enforcement
                                              telephone: (202) 693–1999; email:                       industry beryllium standard until                     until June 25, 2018, of some of the
                                              meilinger.francis2@dol.gov.                             December 12, 2018. OSHA’s final                       general industry standard’s ancillary
                                                 General information and technical                    economic analysis shows that this                     provisions (related to methods of
                                              inquiries: Mr. William Perry or Ms.                     compliance date extension will result in              compliance, beryllium work areas,
                                              Maureen Ruskin, Directorate of                          a net cost savings for the affected                   regulated areas, personal protective
                                              Standards and Guidance; telephone:                      industries. At a 3 percent discount rate              clothing and equipment, hygiene areas
                                              (202) 693–1950; email: perry.bill@                      over 10 years, the extension will result              and practices, housekeeping,
                                              dol.gov.                                                in net annual cost savings of $0.76                   communication of hazards, and
                                                 Copies of this Federal Register                      million per year; at a discount rate of 7             recordkeeping). The second delay, on
                                              document and news releases: Electronic                  percent over 10 years, the net annual                 June 21, 2018, postponed enforcement
                                              copies of these documents are available                 cost savings is $1.73 million per year.               of those provisions until August 9, 2018.
                                              at OSHA’s web page at https://                          When the Department uses a perpetual                     Following promulgation of the final
                                              www.osha.gov.                                           time horizon, the annualized cost                     rule in January 2017, several general
                                              SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              savings of the final rule is $1.65 million            industry employers, including Materion
                                                                                                      with a 7 percent discount rate. The                   Corporation (‘‘Materion’’), challenged
                                              I. Explanation of Regulatory Action                     detailed final economic analysis, which               the rule in federal court. As part of a
                                              A. Introduction                                         includes more information on OSHA’s                   settlement agreement with Materion,2
                                                                                                      cost/cost savings estimates for this final            OSHA is planning to propose revisions
                                                This final rule extends the                                                                                 to certain provisions in the general
                                                                                                      rule, can be found in the ‘‘Agency
                                              compliance date to December 12, 2018,                                                                         industry standard and to rely on its de
                                                                                                      Determinations’’ section of this
                                              for certain ancillary provisions of the                                                                       minimis policy while the rulemaking is
                                                                                                      preamble. The rule is also an Executive
                                              beryllium rule for general industry,                                                                          pending so that employers may comply
                                                                                                      Order (E.O.) 13771 deregulatory action.
                                              specifically provisions related to                                                                            with the proposed revisions to the
                                              methods of compliance, beryllium work                   C. Regulatory Background                              standard without risk of a citation.3 The
                                              areas, regulated areas, personal                          OSHA published a Notice of Proposed                 revisions OSHA plans to propose under
                                              protective clothing and equipment,                      Rulemaking (NPRM) for occupational                    the settlement agreement are generally
                                              hygiene areas and practices,                            exposure to beryllium in the Federal                  designed to clarify the standard in
                                              housekeeping, communication of                          Register on August 7, 2015. (80 FR                    response to stakeholder questions or to
                                              hazards, and recordkeeping. This rule                   47566). In the NPRM, the agency made                  simplify compliance, while in all cases
                                              does not affect the new permissible                     a preliminary determination that                      maintaining a high degree of protection
                                              exposure limits (PELs) for general                      employees exposed to beryllium and                    from the adverse health effects of
                                              industry, construction, and shipyards or                beryllium compounds at the previous                   beryllium exposure (Document ID
                                              the general industry provisions for                     PEL faced a significant risk to their                 2156).
                                              exposure assessment, respiratory                        health and that promulgating the
                                              protection, medical surveillance, and                                                                         D. Summary of Public Comments and
                                                                                                      NPRM’s proposed standard would                        Explanation of Final Action
                                              medical removal, which OSHA began                       substantially reduce that risk. The
                                              enforcing on May 11, 2018. This final                   NPRM invited interested stakeholders to                 On June 1, 2018, OSHA published a
                                              rule also does not affect the March 11,                 submit comments on a variety of issues.               proposed rule to extend the compliance
                                              2019, compliance date for the                             OSHA held a public hearing in
                                              provisions on change rooms and                          Washington, DC, on March 21 and 22,                   FR 19936; 83 FR 31045). The DFR clarified the
                                              showers in paragraph (i) (hygiene areas                                                                       definitions of ‘‘beryllium work area,’’ ‘‘emergency,’’
                                                                                                      2016. The agency heard testimony from                 ‘‘dermal contact,’’ and ‘‘beryllium contamination.’’
                                              and practices) or the March 10, 2020,                   a number of organizations, including                  It also clarified OSHA’s intent with respect to
                                              compliance date for implementation of                   public health groups, industry                        provisions for disposal and recycling of materials
                                              the engineering controls required by                                                                          that contain or are contaminated with beryllium,
                                                                                                      representatives, and labor unions.                    and with respect to provisions that the agency
                                              paragraph (f) (methods of compliance).                  Following the hearing, participants had               intends to apply only where skin can be exposed
                                              Finally, this rule does not affect the                  an opportunity to submit additional                   to materials containing at least 0.1 percent
                                              applicability of paragraph (a) (scope and               evidence and data, as well as final                   beryllium by weight.
                                                                                                                                                               2 The Materion settlement agreement can be
                                              application) or paragraph (b)                           briefs, arguments, and summations                     viewed on regulations.gov (Document ID 2156):
                                              (definitions). (Document ID 2156).                      (Document ID 1756, Tr. 326).                          https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=OSHA-
                                              OSHA has determined that this final                       On January 9, 2017, after considering               H005C-2006-0870-2156.
                                              rule will maintain essential safety and                 the entire record, OSHA issued a final                   3 The OSH Act allows the Secretary of Labor to

                                              health protections for workers while                    rule with separate standards for general              prescribe procedures for issuing notices instead of
                                                                                                                                                            citations for ‘‘de minimis violations’’ that have no
                                              OSHA prepares a Notice of Proposed                      industry, shipyards, and construction,                direct or immediate relationship to safety or health.
                                              Rulemaking (NPRM) to clarify specific                   in order to tailor requirements to the                29 U.S.C. 658(a). OSHA’s de minimis policy is set
                                              provisions of the beryllium standard in                 circumstances found in these sectors.                 forth in its Field Operations Manual, available at
                                              accordance with a settlement agreement                                                                        https://www.osha.gov/OshDoc/Directive_pdf/CPL_
                                                                                                      See 82 FR 2470. The general industry                  02-00-160.pdf. OSHA considers it a de minimis
                                              entered into with stakeholders. The                     standard became effective on March 10,                condition when an employer ‘‘complies with a
                                              revisions that OSHA plans to propose                    2017, and the compliance date for most                proposed OSHA standard or amendment or a
                                              are designed to enhance worker                          of the standard’s provisions was March                consensus standard rather than with the standard
                                              protections by ensuring that the rule is                                                                      in effect at the time of the inspection and the
                                                                                                      12, 2018. However, on March 2, 2018,
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                                                                                                                                                            employer’s action clearly provides equal or greater
                                              well-understood and compliance is                       OSHA issued a memorandum stating                      employee protection.’’ De minimis conditions do
                                              simple and straightforward.                             that no provisions of the general                     not result in citations or penalties. See 29 CFR
                                                                                                      industry standard would be enforced                   1903.15(c) (‘‘Penalties shall not be proposed for de
                                              B. Summary of Economic Impact                                                                                 minimis violations which have no direct or
                                                                                                      until May 11, 2018.1 Two subsequent                   immediate relationship to safety or health.’’); See
                                                OSHA has determined that this final                                                                         Employer Rights and Responsibilities Following a
                                              rule is not economically significant. The                 1 On May 7, 2018, OSHA published a Direct Final     Federal OSHA Inspection, https://www.osha.gov/
                                              rule revises 29 CFR 1910.1024(o)(2) to                  Rule (DFR) which became effective July 6, 2018. (83   Publications/osha3000.pdf.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                       39353

                                              date to December 12, 2018 for certain                   (Document ID 2161, p.2). Airborn Inc.,                protection, medical surveillance, and
                                              ancillary requirements of the general                   Mead Metals, Inc., and the National                   medical removal.
                                              industry beryllium standard. (83 FR                     Association of Manufacturers (NAM)                       Moreover, in adopting this final rule,
                                              25536). OSHA explained that the                         supported Materion’s comments and                     OSHA recognizes that the goal of worker
                                              proposed extension would give the                       registered their own support for the                  protection can be frustrated where
                                              agency time to prepare and publish a                    extension. (Document ID 2166, p.1;                    employers do not clearly understand
                                              planned NPRM to amend the general                       2167, p.1; 2168, pp.1–2). These three                 OSHA’s requirements or how to
                                              industry standard before employers                      stakeholders agreed that an extension is              implement them. OSHA appreciates the
                                              would be required to comply with                        ‘‘necessary to give OSHA enough time                  concerns of those stakeholders who note
                                              certain ancillary provisions affected by                to draft and publish’’ the forthcoming,               that, until OSHA releases its planned
                                              that NPRM. That in turn would allow                     substantive NPRM. (Document ID 2166,                  NPRM, employers may lack clarity
                                              employers to comply with the proposed                   p.1; 2167, p.1; 2168, p.1). NAM added                 regarding how to implement and
                                              provisions without risk of a citation                   that the proposed extension was                       comply with the beryllium standard.
                                              until any such changes are finalized                    ‘‘another positive step toward a more                 OSHA has determined that it would be
                                              (Document ID 2156).                                     effective general industry standard for               undesirable, for both the agency and
                                                 In the proposal, OSHA requested                      the benefit of workers.’’ (Document ID                those it regulates, to begin enforcement
                                              comments from the public on both the                    2168, p.2). NAM also expressed its                    of certain ancillary provisions of the
                                              duration and scope of the proposed                      appreciation for ‘‘OSHA’s recognition of              standard that will likely be affected by
                                              compliance date extension (83 FR                        employers’ reasonable and practical                   the upcoming rulemaking—a scenario
                                              25539). OSHA asked commenters to                        concerns regarding compliance in                      that could result in employers taking
                                              include a rationale for any concerns                    anticipation of [the forthcoming,                     unnecessary measures to comply with
                                              they had with the proposal, as well as                  substantive NPRM].’’ (Document ID                     provisions to which OSHA intends to
                                              for any alternatives they suggested.                    2168, p.2).                                           propose clarifications.
                                              OSHA also requested comments on the                                                                              NELP and Public Citizen also asserted
                                                                                                         Four other commenters, the United
                                              ‘‘Agency Determinations’’ section of the                                                                      that the proposed compliance-date
                                                                                                      Steelworkers (USW), Public Citizen,
                                              proposal, including the preliminary                                                                           extension conflicted with OSHA’s
                                                                                                      UNITE HERE! International Union
                                              economic analysis and other regulatory                                                                        finding that a comprehensive standard
                                                                                                      (UNITE HERE), and the National
                                              effects on employers and workers.                                                                             is needed to protect workers exposed to
                                                                                                      Employment Law Project (NELP),
                                                 OSHA received ten comments in                                                                              beryllium. (Document ID 2162; 2163).
                                                                                                      opposed the proposed extension.
                                              response to the proposal (Document IDs                                                                        OSHA disagrees with that assertion that
                                                                                                      (Document ID 2160; 2162–2164). These
                                              2159–2168). The comments generally                                                                            this extension is in conflict with
                                                                                                      commenters argued that the extension                  OSHA’s findings. OSHA believes that a
                                              focused on three issues arising from the
                                              proposed extension: (1) Whether to                      would be unnecessary and unjustified,                 comprehensive standard is critically
                                              extend the compliance date, (2) the                     and would delay the implementation of                 important for the protection of workers
                                              scope of any extension, and (3) the                     important protections for workers. (See,              exposed to beryllium in general
                                              appropriate duration of any extension.                  e.g., Document ID 2160, pp. 1–2). For                 industry settings. However, the benefits
                                              Below we examine these three issues, in                 example, Public Citizen maintained that               of a comprehensive standard may not be
                                              that order—by summarizing the                           ‘‘[e]xpeditious implementation of the                 fully realized where employers do not
                                              comments and then explaining the                        ancillary provisions in general industry              clearly understand, and have trouble
                                              agency’s determinations based on the                    is absolutely necessary to enhance the                implementing, its requirements. OSHA
                                              record as a whole. We then address two                  benefits of the newly adopted PEL,                    finds that this limited, short-term
                                              miscellaneous comments.                                 ultimately providing another level of                 extension of the compliance date for
                                                                                                      protection in occupational settings.’’                certain ancillary requirements of the
                                              1. Extension of the Compliance Date for                 (Document ID 2162, p.3). It argued that               standard will give the agency the time
                                              Certain Ancillary Provisions in the                     delaying implementation would allow                   necessary to ensure that employers have
                                              General Industry Standard                               employers to continue to expose                       clear direction on how to protect
                                                 Five commenters supported the                        workers to unsafe levels of beryllium,                workers exposed to beryllium.
                                              agency’s proposed extension of the                      ensuring ‘‘the occurrence of even more                Additionally, as noted previously,
                                              compliance date for ancillary provisions                cases of beryllium sensitization, chronic             OSHA will continue to maintain
                                              affected by OSHA’s forthcoming,                         beryllium disease, . . . . lung cancer,’’             essential safety and health protections
                                              substantive NPRM. (See Document ID                      and other adverse health effects.                     for workers through ongoing
                                              2161; 2165–2168). For example, Century                  (Document ID 2162, p.3).                              enforcement of many of the beryllium
                                              Aluminum Company stated that ‘‘the                         OSHA understands Public Citizen’s                  standard’s key provisions. Enforcement
                                              affected portions of the Standard should                concerns; the agency’s goal is to protect             of other OSHA standards, such as the
                                              be delayed to allow OSHA time to                        the health and safety of workers. That is             Hazard Communication Standard (29
                                              prepare and publish the substantive                     why OSHA has narrowly tailored the                    CFR 1910.1200) and Access to
                                              proposed rule so that employers do not                  scope of the compliance date extension                Employee Exposure and Medical
                                              take unnecessary and costly measures.’’                 to cover only provisions that will be                 Records (29 CFR 1910.1020) will also
                                              (Document ID 2165, p.1). It added that                  affected by the forthcoming, substantive              provide other important protections for
                                              the proposed delay would also limit                     NPRM. OSHA is enforcing, and will                     workers in general industry. In
                                              confusion among employers and other                     continue to enforce, many of the                      particular, employers are, and will
                                              stakeholders. (Document ID 2165, p.1).                  provisions that provide critical                      remain, obligated to label hazardous
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                                              Materion similarly observed that the                    protection to general industry                        chemicals containing beryllium, ensure
                                              proposed extension would address the                    employees. This final rule does not                   that safety data sheets are readily
                                              concern that beginning enforcement of                   affect critical worker protections                    available, and train workers on the
                                              provisions affected by the NPRM could                   afforded by enforcement of the revised                hazards of beryllium in accordance with
                                              result in employer confusion or                         lower PEL, the new short-term exposure                the Hazard Communication Standard.
                                              improper implementation of the                          limit (STEL), and requirements for                    OSHA encourages employers to review
                                              relevant provisions of the rule.                        exposure assessment, respiratory                      their hazard communication programs,


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                                              39354             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              employee training, and other hazard                     standard, so that employers can easily                proposed by some of the other
                                              communication practices (such as                        understand and properly implement the                 commenters. Beyond making it clear
                                              workplace labeling) to ensure continued                 standard in order to keep workers                     that the compliance dates for
                                              compliance with the Hazard                              healthy and safe.                                     engineering and work practice controls
                                              Communication Standard.                                   Based on the record as a whole,                     (March 10, 2020) and change rooms and
                                                 USW and UNITE HERE also                              OSHA finds the arguments in favor of                  showers (March 11, 2019) remain
                                              questioned OSHA’s justification for the                 the proposed extension of compliance                  unchanged, Century Aluminum asserted
                                              proposed extension of compliance                        dates to be more persuasive than those                that differentiating by portions of
                                              dates. USW objected to OSHA’s                           against the proposal. Therefore, the                  affected paragraphs would lead to
                                              preliminary determination that                          agency has decided to adopt the                       substantial confusion among employers
                                              beginning enforcement of the ancillary                  proposed extension of compliance dates                and other stakeholders.4
                                              provisions identified in the proposal                   to allow time for the preparation and                    OSHA agrees with Century
                                              before publication of the substantive                   publication of the planned, substantive               Aluminum’s assessment that an
                                              NPRM could result in employer                           NPRM.                                                 extension of compliance dates that
                                              confusion or improper implementation                                                                          differentiated between individual
                                                                                                      2. Scope of the Extension
                                              of the relevant provisions of the rule.                                                                       subparagraphs of the affected ancillary
                                              (Document ID 2160, p.2). USW argued                        Having determined that an extension                provisions, as suggested by USW and
                                              that employers could avoid confusion                    of the compliance date for certain                    UNITE HERE, would create substantial
                                              by complying with the revisions that are                ancillary provisions in the beryllium                 confusion.5 In addition, OSHA does not
                                              identified in the settlement agreement.                 standard for general industry is                      find that the extension should be
                                              (Document ID 2160, p.2). In addition,                   appropriate, OSHA next addresses                      limited to only those situations where
                                              USW and UNITE HERE claimed that                         comments regarding which provisions                   beryllium exposures do not exceed the
                                              OSHA proposed this extension to                         will be included in the extension. In the             PEL. Contrary to USW’s assertion, the
                                              ‘‘demonstrate that it has taken                         NPRM, OSHA proposed extending the                     substantive changes OSHA intends to
                                              deregulatory action.’’ (Document ID                     compliance date for the following                     propose to the beryllium standard for
                                              2160, p.2; 2164).                                       provisions: Beryllium work areas and                  general industry do apply to processes
                                                 OSHA does not agree with the USW                     regulated areas (paragraph (e)), written              that generate exposures above the PEL,
                                              that this extension of compliance dates                 exposure control plans (paragraph                     and they are not limited to products
                                              is unnecessary because employers can                    (f)(1)), personal protective clothing and             whose beryllium content is less than
                                              rely on the regulatory revisions                        equipment (paragraph (h)), hygiene                    one percent by weight. For example,
                                              identified in the settlement agreement                  areas and practices (paragraph (i) except             changes to provisions for methods of
                                              before publication of the substantive                   for change rooms and showers),                        compliance, personal protective
                                              NPRM. The settlement agreement                          housekeeping (paragraph (j)),                         clothing and equipment, housekeeping,
                                              contains only a redlined version of the                 communication of hazards (paragraph                   and hygiene areas and practices involve
                                              relevant regulatory text. It does not                   (m)), and recordkeeping (paragraph (n)).              all beryllium-containing materials
                                              include a full summary and explanation                  OSHA requested comments on the                        where exposures may occur. Therefore,
                                              of the revisions, in which OSHA                         proposed scope of the extension.
                                              explains the meaning of the proposed                       Several commenters objected to the                    4 Materion commented that the proposed

                                              revisions to the regulatory text and, in                scope of the proposed compliance-date                 extension of compliance dates did not cover all of
                                              some cases, provides further                            extension. For example, USW asserted                  the provisions that could be affected by the
                                                                                                      that the underlying settlement                        forthcoming, substantive NPRM. (Document ID
                                              information and examples to aid                                                                               2161, p.1). Specifically, Materion noted that the
                                              compliance. For example, OSHA is                        agreement only ‘‘affects beryllium                    NPRM could also affect the requirements for
                                              planning to propose changes to                          products whose content is less [than]                 medical surveillance and change rooms. (Document
                                              paragraph (j)(3), to address reuse of                   1% by weight, but which does not                      ID 2161, p.1 (citing Document ID 2156, Appendix
                                              beryllium-containing materials in                       generate exposures above the PEL.’’                   B)). However, Materion did not ask OSHA to make
                                                                                                                                                            any changes to the scope of the extension based on
                                              addition to disposal and recycling,                     (Document ID 2160, p. 1). Therefore,                  its comment. Rather, its comment appeared to serve
                                              because in some cases materials may be                  USW argued, ‘‘[t]here is no basis for                 as a recommendation to other employers to ‘‘take
                                              directly reused without being recycled.                 staying ancillary provisions of the                   careful note of the proposed changes identified in
                                              In the summary and explanation for the                  standard in workplaces where                          the settlement agreement, and to take them into
                                                                                                                                                            account when implementing their compliance
                                              proposed rule, OSHA will explain the                    exposures to beryllium are above the                  programs for medical surveillance and change
                                              intended meaning of the term ‘‘reuse’’                  PEL.’’ (Document ID 2160, pp. 1–2).                   rooms.’’ (Document ID 2161, p.1). OSHA notes that,
                                              and the circumstances under which the                   UNITE HERE also asserted that the                     until the NPRM is published, employers may
                                              cleaning and bagging requirements                       proposed extension of compliance dates                comply with the medical surveillance provisions as
                                                                                                                                                            clarified by the definitions of ‘‘CBD diagnostic
                                              included in paragraph (j)(3) would                      should be limited to provisions that                  center,’’ ‘‘chronic beryllium disease,’’ and
                                              apply to the reuse of materials that                    OSHA intends to change. (Document ID                  ‘‘confirmed positive’’ that OSHA has agreed to
                                              contain beryllium.                                      2164). It further argued that ‘‘there is no           propose, which are available in the docket
                                                 OSHA also disagrees with USW and                     justification to delay any provision of               (Document ID 2156) and in OSHA’s interim
                                              UNITE HERE’s characterization of the                                                                          enforcement guidance (https://www.osha.gov/laws-
                                                                                                      the standard to the extent that it would              regs/standardinterpretations/2018-05-09).
                                              rationale for this extension. Although                  regulate exposures above the PEL.’’                      5 OSHA recognizes that three paragraphs, i.e., the
                                              OSHA noted in the proposal that the                     (Document ID 2164). NELP similarly                    paragraphs related to change rooms and showers in
                                              proposed extension was ‘‘expected to be                 commented that the proposal was                       paragraph (i) and the requirement in paragraph
                                              an . . . E.O.[ ] 13771 deregulatory                     ‘‘broad and needlessly pushes back                    (f)(2) for the implementation for engineering
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                                                                                                                                                            controls, have different compliance dates than those
                                              action,’’ it included that statement to                 compliance dates of important worker                  set for other paragraphs in paragraphs (i) and (f).
                                              carry out its obligations under E.O.                    protections to a highly toxic substance.’’            However, this is a function of the way the
                                              13771, not to justify the rulemaking. As                (Document ID 2163, p.1).                              compliance date provisions were structured in the
                                              stated above, the reason for this                          Century Aluminum, however, argued                  January 9, 2017, final rule, and those dates were set
                                                                                                                                                            based on specific findings made by the agency in
                                              rulemaking is to provide OSHA                           that OSHA should not extend the                       that rulemaking. The agency believes employers
                                              sufficient time to promulgate proposed                  compliance date for only certain                      have had ample notice of when the agency intends
                                              clarifications to the general industry                  portions of affected paragraphs, as                   to begin enforcement of these particular provisions.



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                           39355

                                              OSHA’s rationale for the extension of                   is the compliance date for the change rooms               4. Miscellaneous Comments
                                              compliance dates applies to all general                 and showers required by paragraph (i) of the
                                                                                                                                                                   OSHA also received two comments
                                              industry workplaces within the scope of                 Standard, would simplify compliance efforts
                                                                                                                                                                that did not directly relate to the
                                              the beryllium standard, including those                 and limit confusion among affected entities.
                                                                                                                                                                proposed extension of compliance
                                              where beryllium exposures may exceed                    Finally, the additional few months would
                                                                                                                                                                dates. The first, from Materion, is
                                              the PEL. Finally, as to UNITE HERE’s                    allow state plans time to consider whether to
                                                                                                                                                                related to a statement the agency made
                                              comment that the extension should be                    adopt any revisions OSHA makes to the
                                                                                                      Standard without causing significant
                                                                                                                                                                in the proposal. (Document ID 2161,
                                              limited to provisions that OSHA intends                                                                           p.2). Specifically, OSHA stated that it
                                              to change in the final standard, OSHA                   disruption in their respective states.
                                                                                                                                                                ‘‘expects to publish the planned,
                                              has reexamined each of the provisions                                                                             substantive NPRM well in advance of
                                                                                                      (Document ID 2165, p.2). USW and
                                              covered by the proposed extension and                                                                             the compliance dates’’ for change rooms
                                                                                                      UNITE HERE, on the other hand,
                                              confirmed that the final extension of                                                                             and showers (March 11, 2019) and
                                                                                                      recommended that the proposed
                                              compliance dates applies only to                                                                                  engineering controls (March 10, 2020).
                                                                                                      extension continue until thirty days
                                              paragraphs affected by the upcoming,                                                                              Materion maintained that ‘‘it is
                                                                                                      after the substantive NPRM is issued or
                                              substantive NPRM.                                                                                                 reasonable and necessary for OSHA to
                                                 After considering these comments,                    December 12, 2018, whichever comes
                                                                                                      first. USW maintained that the                            not only publish the NPRM, but
                                              OSHA has decided to retain the scope                                                                              complete its final changes to the General
                                              of the extension as proposed. The                       potentially shorter extension would
                                                                                                      allow time for employers to conform                       Industry Standard for beryllium well
                                              extension of compliance dates,                                                                                    ahead of March 11, 2019, since the
                                              therefore, will apply to the following                  their practices to the content of the
                                                                                                      NPRM, while providing workers with                        revisions OSHA plans to propose are
                                              provisions: Beryllium work areas and                                                                              primarily clarifying or simplifying in
                                              regulated areas (paragraph (e)), written                necessary protections as soon as
                                                                                                      possible.                                                 nature . . . and designed to enhance
                                              exposure control plans (paragraph                                                                                 worker protections by ensuring that the
                                              (f)(1)), personal protective clothing and                  After considering these comments,                      rule is well-understood and compliance
                                              equipment (paragraph (h)), hygiene                      OSHA is not persuaded that it should                      is simple and straightforward.’’
                                              areas and practices (paragraph (i) except               alter the duration of the proposed                        (Document ID 2161, p.2 (citing
                                              for change rooms and showers),                          extension. Although OSHA appreciates                      Document ID 2156)). Materion further
                                              housekeeping (paragraph (j)),                           Century Aluminum’s points, the agency                     commented that ‘‘[e]mployees will
                                              communication of hazards (paragraph                     must balance arguments in favor of a                      benefit most by completion of all
                                              (m)), and recordkeeping (paragraph (n)).                longer extension against the concerns                     changes as soon as possible, and
                                                                                                      raised by commenters, such as USW,                        certainly before early 2019.’’ (Document
                                              3. Duration of the Extension
                                                                                                      that an unnecessarily lengthy extension                   ID 2161, p.2).
                                                 Having determined that it is                         could deny general industry workers                          OSHA understands Materion’s
                                              appropriate to extend the compliance                    certain protections afforded to them                      concern, and agrees that prompt
                                              date for certain ancillary provisions in                under the affected ancillary provisions.                  finalization of any substantive revisions
                                              the general industry beryllium standard,                Moreover, although OSHA understands                       to the general industry standard for
                                              the remaining issue is the duration of                  Century Aluminum’s concern about the                      beryllium would be ideal. Therefore, the
                                              the extension. In the NPRM, OSHA                        potential increase in costs that could                    agency will proceed with the
                                              proposed extending the relevant                         result if the provisions adopted as a                     substantive rulemaking as expeditiously
                                              compliance date until December 12,                      result of the planned substantive                         as possible. However, OSHA will also
                                              2018. OSHA requested comments on the                    rulemaking do not mirror those                            need to ensure that stakeholders have a
                                              duration of the extension.                              proposed in the substantive NPRM, the
                                                 Very few commenters expressly                                                                                  meaningful opportunity to comment on
                                                                                                      agency cannot, at this time, estimate                     the forthcoming proposal and that the
                                              opined on the duration of the proposed                  with much certainty when any final rule
                                              compliance date extension, and those                                                                              agency has adequate time to consider
                                                                                                      will be promulgated.6 OSHA also rejects                   and address stakeholder comments.
                                              who did disagreed as to whether a                       USW and UNITE HERE’s call for
                                              longer or shorter extension was                                                                                   Consequently, at this time the agency
                                                                                                      compliance dates based on the                             does not have a specific target date for
                                              appropriate. For example, Century                       publication of the substantive NPRM; a
                                              Aluminum asked OSHA to consider                                                                                   conclusion of the substantive
                                                                                                      timeline based on a currently uncertain                   rulemaking.
                                              extending the relevant compliance date                  date would be more difficult and                             The second comment that was not
                                              for an additional three months, to March                confusing for employers and workers.                      directly related to the proposed
                                              11, 2019. (Document ID 2165, pp. 1–2).                  The agency finds that the proposed                        extension of compliance dates was
                                              It argued that ‘‘[a]n additional three                  compliance date of December 12, 2018,                     submitted by an anonymous
                                              months would give OSHA the time to                      appropriately balances the concerns                       commenter, who indicated strong
                                              receive comments on the substantive                     raised by stakeholders, will provide the                  support for the beryllium rule generally.
                                              proposed rule and publish a final rule.’’               agency sufficient time to draft and                       (Document ID 2159). The commenter
                                              (Document ID 2165, p.1). It further                     publish the NPRM, and will give                           submitted summary statistics on
                                              stated that a longer extension would                    employers sufficient time to comply.                      relationships between beryllium
                                              prevent confusion and unnecessary                       Therefore, OSHA has decided to extend                     exposure and the prevalence of
                                              costs:                                                  the compliance date for the identified                    beryllium sensitization and chronic
                                                A delay until the substantive rulemaking is           provisions until December 12, 2018, as                    beryllium disease in a cohort at a
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                                              completed would also prevent a situation                proposed.                                                 beryllium precision machining facility
                                              where employers comply with the de                                                                                and stated that the results support the
                                              minimis policy, only to have to change
                                              practices if the final rule does not adopt all
                                                                                                         6 Although not suggested by Century Aluminum,          control of workplace beryllium
                                                                                                      OSHA also notes that an indefinite extension of           exposures. However, this commenter
                                              of the revisions in the proposed rule. The              compliance deadlines, i.e., a compliance date
                                              costs of such a midstream about-face could              determined by the date the substantive rulemaking
                                                                                                                                                                did not address how the data or
                                              be significant. Moreover, aligning the                  is completed, is likely to result in greater, not less,   conclusions provided related to the
                                              compliance date with March 11, 2019, which              confusion.                                                proposed extension of compliance dates


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                                              39356             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              or otherwise offer any comments on the                  on January 9, 2017, so OSHA has                         addition of 100 employees. If an
                                              specific terms of the proposed                          updated the projected costs for general                 employer is able to rearrange current
                                              extension. To the extent that this                      industry contained in the final                         employees’ duties to implement a rule,
                                              commenter intended to argue that the                    economic analysis that accompanied the                  then the marginal share of overhead
                                              proposed extension of compliance dates                  rule from 2015 to 2017 dollars, using the               costs, such as rent, insurance, and major
                                              would have a detrimental impact on                      latest Occupational Employment                          office equipment (e.g., computers,
                                              worker health, that comment is                          Statistics (OES) wage data (for 2016) and               printers, copiers), would be very
                                              addressed above in response to similar                  inflating them to 2017 dollars.                         difficult to measure with accuracy.
                                              concerns expressed by USW, Public                       Additionally, although familiarization                     If OSHA had included an overhead
                                              Citizen, UNITE HERE, and NELP.                          costs were included in the cost                         rate when estimating the marginal cost
                                                                                                      estimates developed in the 2017                         of labor, without further analyzing an
                                              II. Agency Determinations                               economic analysis, OSHA expects that                    appropriate quantitative adjustment,
                                              A. Final Economic Analysis and                          those costs have already been incurred                  and adopted for these purposes an
                                              Regulatory Flexibility Certification                    by affected employers, and is excluding                 overhead rate of 17 percent on base
                                                                                                      them from its analysis of the cost                      wages, the cost savings of this final rule
                                                 Executive Orders 12866 and 13563,
                                                                                                      savings associated with this extension of               would increase to approximately $0.82
                                              the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
                                                                                                      compliance dates. Thus, baseline costs                  million per year, at a discount rate of 3
                                              601–612), and the Unfunded Mandates
                                                                                                      for this final economic analysis (FEA)                  percent, or to approximately $1.87
                                              Reform Act (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1532(a))                    are the projected costs from the 2017
                                              require that OSHA estimate the benefits,                                                                        million per year, at a discount rate of 7
                                                                                                      economic analysis, updated to 2017                      percent.9 The addition of 17-percent
                                              costs, and net benefits of regulations,                 dollars, less familiarization costs.
                                              and analyze the effects of certain rules                                                                        overhead on base wages would therefore
                                                                                                         OSHA notes that it did not include an                increase cost savings by approximately
                                              that OSHA promulgates. Executive                        overhead labor cost in the 2017 analysis,
                                              Order 13563 emphasizes the importance                                                                           8 percent above the primary estimate at
                                                                                                      and has not accounted for such costs in                 either discount rate.
                                              of quantifying both costs and benefits,                 this FEA. There is not one broadly
                                              reducing costs, harmonizing rules, and                  accepted overhead rate, and the use of                  2. Changes to the Standard: Nine-Month
                                              promoting flexibility.                                  overhead to estimate the marginal costs                 Extension of the Compliance Date for
                                                 This final rule is not an                            of labor raises a number of issues that                 Some Ancillary Provisions
                                              ‘‘economically significant regulatory                   should be addressed before applying
                                              action’’ under E.O. 12866 or UMRA, or                                                                              The general industry beryllium
                                                                                                      overhead costs to analyze the cost                      standard went into effect on May 20,
                                              a ‘‘major rule’’ under the Congressional                implications of any specific regulation.
                                              Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.).                                                                              2017, with most compliance obligations
                                                                                                      There are several ways to look at the                   beginning on March 12, 2018. OSHA is
                                              Neither the benefits nor the costs of this              cost elements that fit the definition of
                                              final rule would exceed $100 million in                                                                         finalizing the extension of the
                                                                                                      overhead, and there is a range of                       compliance date for specific provisions
                                              any given year. This final rule to extend               overhead estimates currently used
                                              the compliance date for certain ancillary                                                                       until December 12, 2018. The
                                                                                                      within the federal government—for                       compliance date for the updated PELs,
                                              provisions in the beryllium standard                    example, the Environmental Protection
                                              would result in cost savings. Cost                                                                              as well as for the exposure assessment,
                                                                                                      Agency has used 17 percent,7 and                        respiratory protection, medical
                                              savings arise in this context because a                 government contractors have reportedly
                                              delay in incurred costs for employers                                                                           surveillance, and medical removal
                                                                                                      used 50 percent for on-site (i.e.,                      requirements, and for provisions for
                                              would allow them to invest the funds                    company site) overhead.8 Some
                                              (and earn an expected return at the                                                                             which the standard already establishes
                                                                                                      overhead costs, such as advertising and                 compliance dates in 2019 and 2020, do
                                              going interest rate) that would otherwise               marketing, may be more closely
                                              have been spent to comply with the                                                                              not change as a result of this rule. The
                                                                                                      correlated with output than with labor.                 applicability of the scope and
                                              beryllium standard. OSHA did not                        Other overhead costs vary with the
                                              receive any comments on the                                                                                     application paragraph and the
                                                                                                      number of new employees. For example,                   definitions also do not change as a
                                              preliminary economic analysis OSHA                      rent or payroll processing costs may
                                              prepared for the proposal.                                                                                      result of this rule, except that employers
                                                                                                      change little with the addition of 1                    may comply with the definitions of
                                                 At a discount rate of 3 percent, this                employee in a 500-employee firm, but
                                              final compliance-date extension yields                                                                          ‘‘CBD diagnostic center,’’ ‘‘chronic
                                                                                                      may change substantially with the
                                              annualized cost savings of $0.76 million                                                                        beryllium disease,’’ and ‘‘confirmed
                                              per year for 10 years. At a discount rate                 7 Cody Rice, U.S. Environmental Protection
                                                                                                                                                              positive’’ that will be proposed in the
                                              of 7 percent, this final rule yields an                 Agency, ‘‘Wage Rates for Economic Analyses of the       later substantive rulemaking NPRM
                                              annualized cost savings of $1.73 million                Toxics Release Inventory Program,’’ June 10, 2002       (Document ID 2156). The purpose of
                                              per year for 10 years. When the
                                                                                                      (document ID 2025). This analysis itself was based      this final rule is to provide time for
                                                                                                      on a survey of several large chemical manufacturing
                                              Department uses a perpetual time                        plants: Heiden Associates, Final Report: A Study of
                                                                                                                                                              OSHA to issue a planned NPRM that
                                              horizon to allow for cost comparisons                   Industry Compliance Costs Under the Final               will affect the parts of the standard that
                                              under E.O. 13771 (82 FR 9339, Jan. 30,                  Comprehensive Assessment Information Rule,              are covered by this compliance-date
                                                                                                      Prepared for the Chemical Manufacturers                 extension before that compliance date is
                                              2017), the annualized cost savings of                   Association, December 14, 1989.
                                              this final compliance date extension are                  8 Grant Thornton LLP, 2017 Government
                                                                                                                                                              reached, so that OSHA may rely on its
                                              $1.65 million at a discount rate of 7                   Contractor Survey, https://www.grantthornton.com/       de minimis policy and employers may
                                              percent.                                                -/media/content-page-files/public-sector/pdfs/
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                                                                                                      surveys/2018/2017-government-contractor-survey.           9 OSHA used an overhead rate of 17 percent on

                                              1. Changes to the Baseline: Updating to                 According to Grant Thornton’s 2017 Government           base wages in a sensitivity analysis in the final
                                                                                                      Contractor Survey, on-site rates are generally higher   economic analysis (OSHA–2010–0034–4247, p. VII–
                                              2017 Dollars and Removing                               than off-site rates, because the on-site overhead       65) in support of the March 25, 2016, final
                                              Familiarization Costs; Discussion of                    pool includes the facility-related expenses incurred    respirable crystalline silica standards (81 FR 16286)
                                              Overhead Costs                                          by the company to house the employee, while no          and in the preliminary economic analysis in
                                                                                                      such expenses are incurred or allocated to the labor    support of the June 27, 2017, beryllium proposal for
                                                More than one year has elapsed since                  costs of direct charging personnel who work at the      the construction and shipyard sectors (82 FR
                                              promulgation of the beryllium standards                 customer site.                                          29201).



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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                   39357

                                              comply with the proposed provisions                     savings by year and discount rate are                 stakeholders are unclear about OSHA
                                              without risk of a citation.                             shown below in Table 2.                               requirements. Hence, by addressing
                                                OSHA estimated the cost savings of                                                                          stakeholder questions and concerns, the
                                              the final rule relative to baseline costs,              3. Economic and Technological
                                                                                                      Feasibility                                           planned rulemaking will make it more
                                              where baseline costs reflect the costs of                                                                     likely that the regulated community will
                                              compliance without the final rule’s                        In the final economic analysis for the             realize the full benefits of the rule, as
                                              changes to the compliance date. OSHA                    2017 general industry beryllium                       estimated in the 2017 final economic
                                              calculated the cost savings by lagging                  standard, OSHA concluded that the rule                analysis. Although it is not possible to
                                              the first-year costs for the affected                   was technologically feasible. OSHA has                quantify the effect of stakeholder
                                              provisions by nine months and then                      determined that this final rule is also               uncertainty on the projected benefits of
                                              calculating the present value of the                    technologically feasible because it does              the rule, OSHA believes that the short-
                                              delayed costs over the 10 years                         not change any of the rule’s substantive              term loss of benefits associated with this
                                              following the new compliance date.                      requirements, and, if adopted, would                  extension of initial compliance dates
                                              Annualizing the present value of cost                   simply give employers more time to                    will be more than offset in the long term
                                              savings over ten years, the result is an                comply with some of the rule’s ancillary              by the benefits resulting from the
                                              annualized cost savings of $0.76 million                requirements. Furthermore, OSHA                       agency’s effort to clarify the rule. OSHA
                                              per year at a discount rate of 3 percent,               previously concluded that the beryllium               has determined that this final rule will
                                              or $1.73 million per year at a discount                 standard was economically feasible. As                maintain essential safety and health
                                              rate of 7 percent. When the Department                  this final rule does not impose any new               protections for workers.
                                              uses a perpetual time horizon to allow                  substantive requirements, and results in
                                              for cost comparisons under E.O. 13771,                  cost savings, OSHA has concluded that                 5. Certification of No Significant Impact
                                              the annualized cost savings of this                     the final rule is also economically                   on a Substantial Number of Small
                                              compliance date extension is $1.65                      feasible.                                             Entities
                                              million at a discount rate of 7 percent.
                                                The undiscounted cost savings by                      4. Effects on Benefits                                  This final rule will result in cost
                                              provision and year are presented below                     The planned rulemaking to revise the               savings for affected employers, and
                                              in Table 1. As shown in Table 1, and                    general industry beryllium standard is                those savings fall below levels that
                                              described elsewhere in this final rule,                 intended to be responsive to questions                could be said to have a significant
                                              the cost savings described in this FEA                  and concerns expressed by stakeholders                positive economic impact on a
                                              reflect savings only for provisions                     regarding ancillary provisions of the                 substantial number of small entities.11
                                              covered by the compliance date                          rule. Safety and health programs can be               Therefore, OSHA certifies that this final
                                              extension. OSHA estimated no cost                       ineffective if employers and other                    rule does not have a significant impact
                                              savings for the PELs, exposure                                                                                on a substantial number of small
                                              assessment, respiratory protection,                     is extending the compliance date for paragraph (h).   entities.
                                              medical surveillance, or medical                        Thus, employers will not incur the labor costs        BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
                                                                                                      associated with changing time for personal
                                              removal provisions (as they are not                     protective equipment until December 12, 2018, so
                                              covered by the extension), or for any                   OSHA is generally accounting for those cost savings
                                                                                                                                                               11 OSHA investigated whether the projected cost

                                              provisions for which the rule already                   in this FEA. OSHA has not accounted for any cost      savings would exceed 1 percent of revenues or 5
                                                                                                      savings related to the use of head covers, however.   percent of profits for small entities and very small
                                              establishes compliance dates in 2019
                                                                                                      Head covers may be used to prevent contamination      entities for every industry. To determine if this was
                                              (change rooms/showers) or 2020                                                                                the case, OSHA returned to its original regulatory
                                                                                                      of employees’ hair, potentially precluding the need
                                              (engineering controls).10 The cost                      for showers under paragraph (i)(3) of the standard.   flexibility analysis (2017) for small entities and very
                                                                                                      Because this final rule does not extend the           small entities. OSHA found that the cost savings of
                                                10 Note that the labor costs associated with time     compliance date for showers, OSHA has not             this final rule are such a small percentage of
                                              spent changing clothes are generally triggered by       accounted for head covers for purposes of             revenues and profits for every affected industry that
                                              wearing personal protective equipment, as required      estimating the cost savings associated with this      OSHA’s criteria would not be exceeded for any
                                              by paragraph (h) of the beryllium standard. OSHA        final rule.                                           industry.
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39358           Federal Register/Vol. 83, No. 154 /Thursday, August 9, 2018 /Rules and Regulations
                                      Year and Provision
                                      Costs
                                      Table 1: Undiscounted
BILLING CODE 4510—26—C


                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations                                                                                     39359

                                                                                                   TABLE 2—COST SAVINGS DUE TO COMPLIANCE DATE EXTENSION
                                                                                                                                                                                                     Undiscounted               Discounted    Discounted
                                                                                                      Year                                                                           t               costs by year              costs—3%      costs—7%

                                                                                                                                                          Baseline

                                              1 .......................................................................................................................                   1.00           $53,861,070            $52,292,301   $50,337,449
                                              2 .......................................................................................................................                   2.00            31,965,865             30,130,893    27,920,224
                                              3 .......................................................................................................................                   3.00            31,965,865             29,253,295    26,093,668
                                              4 .......................................................................................................................                   4.00            31,965,865             28,401,257    24,386,605
                                              5 .......................................................................................................................                   5.00            31,965,865             27,574,036    22,791,220
                                              6 .......................................................................................................................                   6.00            31,965,865             26,770,909    21,300,205
                                              7 .......................................................................................................................                   7.00            31,965,865             25,991,173    19,906,734
                                              8 .......................................................................................................................                   8.00            31,965,865             25,234,149    18,604,424
                                              9 .......................................................................................................................                   9.00            31,965,865             24,499,174    17,387,312
                                              10 .....................................................................................................................                   10.00            31,965,865             23,785,605    16,249,825

                                                     Total ..........................................................................................................     ........................   ........................   293,932,792   244,977,667
                                                     Annualized—10 Years ..............................................................................                   ........................   ........................    34,457,890    34,879,308

                                                                                                                                               Discounting Option 1

                                              1 .......................................................................................................................                   1.75             53,861,070            51,145,783    47,846,852
                                              2 .......................................................................................................................                   2.75             31,965,865            29,470,268    26,538,787
                                              3 .......................................................................................................................                   3.75             31,965,865            28,611,911    24,802,605
                                              4 .......................................................................................................................                   4.75             31,965,865            27,778,554    23,180,004
                                              5 .......................................................................................................................                   5.75             31,965,865            26,969,470    21,663,556
                                              6 .......................................................................................................................                   6.75             31,965,865            26,183,952    20,246,314
                                              7 .......................................................................................................................                   7.75             31,965,865            25,421,312    18,921,788
                                              8 .......................................................................................................................                   8.75             31,965,865            24,680,886    17,683,914
                                              9 .......................................................................................................................                   9.75             31,965,865            23,962,025    16,527,023
                                              10 .....................................................................................................................                   10.75             31,965,865            23,264,102    15,445,816

                                                     Total ..........................................................................................................     ........................   ........................   287,488,264   232,856,658
                                                     Annualized—10 Years ..............................................................................                   ........................   ........................    33,702,395    33,153,550

                                                            Difference from Baseline ...................................................................                  ........................   ........................     ¥755,495    ¥1,725,759



                                              B. Paperwork Reduction Act                                                    Act) (29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.), Congress                                       healthful employment and places of
                                                This final rule does not change the                                         expressly provides that states and U.S.                                      employment as the requirements
                                              information collections already                                               territories may adopt, with Federal                                          specified in this final rule.
                                              approved by the Office of Management                                          approval, a plan for the development
                                                                                                                                                                                                         D. State Plans
                                              and Budget (OMB). OMB approved the                                            and enforcement of occupational safety
                                              information collection request for the                                        and health standards. OSHA refers to                                            When Federal OSHA promulgates a
                                              general industry beryllium standard                                           such states and territories as ‘‘State Plan                                  new standard or a more stringent
                                              under OMB Control Number 1218–0267,                                           States.’’ Occupational safety and health                                     amendment to an existing standard,
                                              with an expiration date of April 30,                                          standards developed by State Plan                                            State Plans must amend their standards
                                              2020. OSHA received no comments on                                            States must be at least as effective in                                      to reflect the new standard or
                                              the information collection request in                                         providing safe and healthful                                                 amendment, or show OSHA why such
                                              response to the proposal.                                                     employment and places of employment                                          action is unnecessary, e.g., because an
                                                                                                                            as the Federal standards. 29 U.S.C. 667.                                     existing state standard covering this area
                                              C. Federalism                                                                 Subject to these requirements, State                                         is ‘‘at least as effective’’ as the new
                                                OSHA reviewed this final rule in                                            Plan States are free to develop and                                          Federal standard or amendment (29 CFR
                                              accordance with the Executive Order on                                        enforce under state law their own                                            1953.5(a)). The state standard must be at
                                              Federalism (E.O. 13132, 64 FR 43255                                           requirements for safety and health                                           least as effective as the final Federal
                                              (Aug. 10, 1999)), which requires that                                         standards.                                                                   rule. State Plans must adopt the Federal
                                              Federal agencies, to the extent possible,                                       OSHA previously concluded from its                                         standard or complete their own
                                              refrain from limiting state policy                                            analysis that promulgation of the                                            standard within six months of the
                                              options, consult with states prior to                                         beryllium standard complies with E.O.                                        promulgation date of the final Federal
                                              taking any actions that would restrict                                        13132 (82 FR at 2633). In states without                                     rule. When OSHA promulgates a new
                                              state policy options, and take such                                           an OSHA-approved State Plan, this final                                      standard or amendment that does not
                                              actions only when clear constitutional                                        rule limits state policy options in the                                      impose additional or more stringent
                                              authority exists and the problem is                                           same manner as every standard                                                requirements than an existing standard,
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                                              national in scope. E.O. 13132 provides                                        promulgated by OSHA. For State Plan                                          State Plans do not have to amend their
                                              for preemption of state law only with                                         States, Section 18 of the OSH Act, as                                        standards, although OSHA may
                                              the expressed consent of Congress.                                            noted in the previous paragraph,                                             encourage them to do so. The 21 states
                                              Federal agencies must limit any such                                          permits State Plan States to develop and                                     and 1 U.S. territory with OSHA-
                                              preemption to the extent possible.                                            enforce their own beryllium standards                                        approved occupational safety and health
                                                Under Section 18 of the Occupational                                        provided these requirements are at least                                     plans covering the private sector and
                                              Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSH                                            as effective in providing safe and                                           state and local governments are: Alaska,


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                                              39360             Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2018 / Rules and Regulations

                                              Arizona, California, Hawaii, Indiana,                   G. Legal Considerations                               not impose any additional costs on
                                              Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan,                                                                           employers.
                                              Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North                       The purpose of the OSH Act is ‘‘to
                                              Carolina, Oregon, Puerto Rico, South                    assure so far as possible every working               List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1910
                                              Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont,                     man and woman in the nation safe and
                                                                                                      healthful working conditions and to                     Beryllium, Occupational safety and
                                              Virginia, Washington, and Wyoming.                                                                            health.
                                              Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, New                       preserve our human resources.’’ 29
                                              Jersey, New York, and the Virgin Islands                U.S.C. 651(b). To achieve this goal,                    Signed at Washington, DC, on August 6,
                                              have OSHA-approved State Plans that                     Congress authorized the Secretary of                  2018.
                                              apply to state and local government                     Labor to promulgate and enforce                       Loren Sweatt,
                                              employees only.                                         occupational safety and health                        Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for
                                                The new amendments to OSHA’s                          standards. 29 U.S.C. 654(b), 655(b). A                Occupational Safety and Health.
                                              beryllium final rule do not impose any                  safety or health standard is a standard
                                              new requirements on employers.                          ‘‘which requires conditions, or the                   Amendments to Standards
                                              Accordingly, State Plans do not have to                 adoption or use of one or more
                                              amend their standards to extend the                                                                             For the reasons stated in the preamble
                                                                                                      practices, means, methods, operations,
                                              compliance dates for their beryllium                                                                          of this final rule, OSHA amends 29 CFR
                                                                                                      or processes, reasonably necessary or
                                              rules, but they may do so within the                    appropriate to provide safe or healthful              part 1910 as follows:
                                              limits of this final rule.                              employment or places of employment.’’                 PART 1910—OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY
                                              E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                         29 U.S.C. 652(8). A standard is
                                                                                                                                                            AND HEALTH STANDARDS
                                                                                                      reasonably necessary or appropriate
                                                 When OSHA issued the final rule                      within the meaning of Section 652(8)
                                              establishing standards for occupational                                                                       Subpart Z—Toxic and Hazardous
                                                                                                      when a significant risk of material harm              Substances
                                              exposure to beryllium, it reviewed the                  exists in the workplace and the standard
                                              rule according to the Unfunded                          would substantially reduce or eliminate
                                              Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)                                                                            ■ 1. The authority citation for subpart Z
                                                                                                      that workplace risk. See Indus. Union
                                              (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) and E.O. 13132                                                                        of 29 CFR part 1910 is revised to read
                                                                                                      Dep’t, AFL–CIO v. Am. Petroleum Inst.,
                                              (64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999)). OSHA                     448 U.S. 607 (1980). In the beryllium                 as follows:
                                              concluded that the final rule did not                   rulemaking, OSHA made such a                             Authority: 29 U.S.C. 653, 655, 657;
                                              meet the definition of a ‘‘Federal                      determination with respect to beryllium               Secretary of Labor’s Order No. 12–71 (36 FR
                                              intergovernmental mandate’’ under the                   exposure in general industry (82 FR at                8754), 8–76 (41 FR 25059), 9–83 (48 FR
                                              UMRA because OSHA standards do not                      2479). This final rule does not impose                35736), 1–90 (55 FR 9033), 6–96 (62 FR 111),
                                              apply to state or local governments                     any new requirements on employers.                    3–2000 (65 FR 50017), 5–2002 (67 FR 65008),
                                              except in states that voluntarily adopt                 Therefore, this rule does not require an              5–2007 (72 FR 31160), 4–2010 (75 FR 55355),
                                              State Plans. OSHA further noted that the                additional significant risk finding. See              or 1–2012 (77 FR 3912); 29 CFR part 1911;
                                              rule did not impose costs of over $100                  Edison Elec. Inst. v. OSHA, 849 F.2d                  and 5 U.S.C. 553, as applicable.
                                              million per year on the private sector.                 611, 620 (D.C. Cir. 1988).                               Section 1910.1030 also issued under Public
                                              (82 FR at 2634.)                                                                                              Law 106–430, 114 Stat. 1901. Section
                                                 As discussed above in Section II.A of                   In addition to materially reducing a               1910.1201 also issued under 40 U.S.C. 5101
                                              this preamble, OSHA has determined                      significant risk, a health standard must              et seq.
                                              that this extension does not impose any                 be technologically and economically
                                              costs on private-sector employers                       feasible. United Steelworkers of Am.,                 ■ 2. Amend § 1910.1024 by revising
                                              beyond those costs already identified in                AFL–CIO–CLC v. Marshall, 647 F.2d                     paragraph (o)(2) to read as follows:
                                              the final rule for beryllium in general                 1189, 1251 (D.C. Cir. 1980) (OSHA must
                                              industry. Because OSHA reviewed the                     reduce risk ‘‘as far as it c[an] within the           § 1910.1024    Beryllium.
                                              total costs of the beryllium rule under                 limits of [technological and economic]                *      *     *     *    *
                                              UMRA, no further review of those costs                  feasibility.’’). A standard is
                                                                                                                                                              (o) * * *
                                              is necessary. Therefore, for purposes of                technologically feasible when the
                                              UMRA, OSHA certifies that this final                    protective measures it requires already                 (2) Compliance dates. (i) Obligations
                                              rule does not mandate that state, local,                exist, when available technology can                  contained in paragraphs (c), (d), (g), (k),
                                              or tribal governments adopt new,                        bring the protective measures into                    and (l) of this standard: March 12, 2018;
                                              unfunded regulatory obligations of, or                  existence, or when that technology is                   (ii) Change rooms and showers
                                              increase expenditures by the private                    reasonably likely to develop. See Am.                 required by paragraph (i) of this
                                              sector by, more than $100 million in any                Textile Mfrs. Inst. v. OSHA, 452 U.S.                 standard: March 11, 2019;
                                              year.                                                   490, 513 (1981); Am. Iron & Steel Inst.
                                                                                                      v. OSHA, 939 F.2d 975, 980 (D.C. Cir.                   (iii) Engineering controls required by
                                              F. Consultation and Coordination With                   1991). And a rule is economically                     paragraph (f) of this standard: March 10,
                                              Indian Tribal Governments                               feasible if it does not ‘‘threaten massive            2020; and
                                                OSHA reviewed this final rule in                      dislocation to, or imperil the existence                (iv) All other obligations of this
                                              accordance with E.O. 13175 (65 FR                       of, [an] industry.’’ United Steelworkers,             standard: December 12, 2018.
                                              67249) and determined that it does not                  647 F.2d at 1265 (internal citations and              *      *     *     *    *
                                              have ‘‘tribal implications’’ as defined in              quotation marks omitted). In 2017,
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with RULES




                                                                                                                                                            [FR Doc. 2018–17106 Filed 8–8–18; 8:45 am]
                                              that order. This rule does not have                     OSHA found the beryllium standard to
                                                                                                                                                            BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
                                              substantial direct effects on one or more               be technologically and economically
                                              Indian tribes, on the relationship                      feasible. (82 FR at 2471). This final rule
                                              between the Federal government and                      is technologically and economically
                                              Indian tribes, or on the distribution of                feasible as well because it does not
                                              power and responsibilities between the                  require employers to implement any
                                              Federal government and Indian tribes.                   additional protective measures and does


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Document Created: 2018-08-09 01:12:02
Document Modified: 2018-08-09 01:12:02
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule is effective August 9, 2018.
ContactPress inquiries: Mr. Frank Meilinger, OSHA Office of Communications; telephone: (202) 693-1999; email: [email protected]
FR Citation83 FR 39351 
RIN Number1218-AD19
CFR AssociatedBeryllium and Occupational Safety and Health

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