Players sue NFL for brain injuries: where is OSHA?

The player lockout is not the only issue that the NFL must deal with this week.  Last week, 75 former NFL players sued  the organization claiming that the NFL intentionally concealed and  failed to warn the players about potential brain injuries resulting from game-related concussions.  The players are suing for fraud, negligence, and failure to warn. The players claim that the NFL knew about the link between game-playing and brain injuries since 1920′s but concealed this knowledge until June 2010.

This story leads me to ask, if a football field poses such a dangerous workplace, as suggested by this lawsuit, then why hasn’t OSHA issued a citation?  In 2006, OSHA
answered that question by stating that injuries to professional players are not disproportionately high.

While an OSHA violation is not essential to proving the players’ proposition, it would help establish that the league breached its duty to warn about the dangerous work environment.

Of course, reader, you are asking does OSHA protect professional football players? Yes, assuming that the agency views the player as an employee as opposed to an independent contractor.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration was created by congress in 1979 to help employers reduce workplace injuries, illness, and death.  The
OSH Act covers private employers and their employees
either directly through federal OSHA or through an OSHA-approved state program. State programs must meet or exceed federal OSHA standards for workplace safety and health.  OSHA does not regulate the self-employed.

Employers who do not comply with the OSH Act are subject to civil and criminal penalties until they cure the dangerous condition.  OSHA may impose civil penalties of up to $70,000.00. An employer who is convicted in a criminal proceedings of a willful violation may face up to six months imprisonment and fines up to $250,000.00 (or $500,000.00 if the employer is a corporation). (See 29 U.S.C. § 666.)  An OSHA citation does not create a private right to sue or bring a cause of action against the employer. (See Elliott v. S.D. Warren Co., 134 F.3d 1, 4 (1st Cir. 1998)).

Even though OSHA does not authorize an employee to sue an employer for violations, an employee can sue an employer for failure to warn about occupational hazards. In Pennsylvania, the Supreme Court in 1998, ruled that an employer has a duty to communicate the dangers of the job duties to its employees, if such dangers had been known by employer and generally within the industry. (See Phillips v. A-Best Products, Co., 542 Pa. 124 (1998)). And generally Pennsylvania does not recognize the defense of a sophisticated user.  Under this defense, an employer could claim that the employee is a sophisticated user and thus is aware of the dangers involved in the assignment.  However, Pennsylvania courts have prohibited the application of that defense.

What can you, as a business owner, learn from this case? If you have employees, then you have a duty to warn your employees about potentially dangerous jobs or work conditions.  Under OSHA, you also have a duty to mitigate such dangers.  The good news is that OSHA helps employers identify these risks and develop methods to mitigate these risks.  For help, visit OSHA’s website for  more information. OSHA offers free on-site consultations to small businesses.

Do you have a question about your legal obligations as an employer? Then ask a lawyer.  Call McKee Law Office for a free consultation at 215-242-5260.

Sharmil McKee

Business Attorney

Philadelphia, Pa

blog@mckeeoffice.com

 

 

 

 

Do I have to pay my employees for their time while they are on-call?

It depends on the circumstances of your situation. Basically, the more control that you, as the employer, maintain over the employee while on-call, the more likely you will have to pay his/her wage for that time. For example, if you require the employee to remain within a certain number of miles of the workplace, then the law is likely to require that you compensate the employee. However, if the employee must merely leave a number where the office can contact him/her while on-call, then the law probably will not require you to compensate the employee.

As a note, whether you must pay your employee while on-call is governed by the Federal Labor Standards Act and the Pennsylvania Wage Payment and Collection Law.

 

Do you have a question about employment law? Call us for your free consultation at 215-242-5260.

Sharmil McKee | Business Lawyer | sm@mckeeoffice.com | Philadelphia

Company may legally ban religious headscarves

Nochumson, P.C. is reporting that the Third Circuit Court of Appeals held that a private company that operates a prison on behalf of Delaware County may ban employees from wearing religious headscarves in the workplace.

This is a surprising outcome, because generally religious outerwear is protected from employer discrimination.  However, the court found that in this case, public safety is more important than protecting prison employees right to wear religious outerwear. 

To read the entire article, click here.

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