How We Handle Workplace Safety and OSHA Content
A safety-first policy for OSHA pages, hazard reporting, worker rights, whistleblower issues and emergency limitations.
If there is an immediate life-threatening hazard, serious injury, fire, chemical release, violence, collapse risk or emergency, call 911 or the appropriate emergency service. For OSHA rights, use OSHA.gov or call OSHA where applicable.
What This Policy Covers
This policy covers workplace safety pages, OSHA rights, hazard reporting, whistleblower retaliation, safety training resources, employer obligations and official OSHA contact routes.
Worker Rights Language
OSHA states that workers have the right to a safe workplace and can raise safety concerns without retaliation. Our pages should use careful, source-based language and send readers to OSHA.gov for official complaint and whistleblower details.
OSHA Page Verification Checklist
- Official OSHA worker rights page or publication.
- Correct distinction between safety complaint and whistleblower complaint.
- Emergency warning for immediate danger.
- No claim that our site can submit OSHA complaints.
- Clear note that some public-sector workers are covered differently by state plans.
Retaliation Warning
Retaliation complaints can involve strict deadlines. If a worker is fired, demoted, threatened, disciplined or punished after raising a safety issue, the article should tell them to open the official OSHA whistleblower resource quickly.
Limits of Our Safety Content
We are not a safety consultant, inspector, attorney or emergency-response service. We provide general navigation and official links only.
Safety Pages Must Put User Safety First
Emergency and retaliation warnings should never be hidden below generic text.
Open Official DOL Worker Rights Open USA.gov Labor Laws