House passes bill withdrawing Florida from OSHA oversight

By Renzo Downey
FloridaPolitics.com
November 18, 2021

One Democrat broke with the party to vote in favor of the measure.

The Florida House has approved legislation asking the Governor to develop a state workplace safety plan, handing the issue off to the Senate.

The measure (HB 5B), passed Wednesday, would give Gov. Ron DeSantis until Jan. 17 to develop a plan for Florida to seek federal approval for a state counterpart to the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

Leaders in Florida’s Republican-led Legislature initially framed the measure as a way to bypass vaccine mandates from a “weaponized” federal agency, although state occupational safety agencies must be at least as strict as OSHA. Land O’Lakes Republican Rep. Ardian Zika, the bill’s sponsor, has tied the bill to “freedom,” telling members the proposal would benefit both employers and employees and allow them to grow economically.

“Florida knows Florida better than Washington, D.C. will ever know Florida,” Zika said. “We have a responsibility as Floridians to ensure that Florida remains the launching pad for the American dream.”

The bill passed 76 to 38, with only Miami Democratic Rep. James Bush crossing party lines to vote in favor of the measure.

No Republicans besides Zika spoke in favor of the bill during debate, but many Democratic Caucus members lined up to oppose the bill, calling it a waste of time.

While the vaccine mandate, which was set to begin in January but is currently paused in federal court, was the impetus for the bill, lawmakers acknowledge it would likely take years to implement a state plan. Furthermore, the federal government must approve state plans. Forgoing a vaccine mandate, if the mandate is held up in court, could lead the federal government to deny Florida’s plan.

“The bill does nothing. It doesn’t do anything. We don’t need it. It’s a bad idea. It’s likely not going to go anywhere. And if it did, I don’t see how we can get this right if we can’t get unemployment right,” Aventura Democratic Rep. Joe Geller said.

The measures include a $1 million fund for the Governor’s Office to develop the plan, including to hire consultants if necessary. But during a House Pandemics & Public Emergencies Committee meeting on Monday, lawmakers said it wasn’t necessary to ask the Governor to develop a plan. The initiative could stem from the Legislature.

“Asking the Governor to come up with a plan for a legislative plan that we don’t need in order to pass our own legislative plan is like giving the Governor a million dollars to tell us what his budget recommendations are,” Orlando Democratic Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith said.

While it was DeSantis who began the call for a Special Session addressing COVID-19 policies, Senate President Wilton Simpson and House Speaker Chris Sprowls were the first to raise the concept of removing Florida from OSHA. DeSantis gave a tepid endorsement of the OSHA measure when a reporter in Naples asked about it Tuesday.

He noted Florida’s decision to leave OSHA, should it happen, would not be unprecedented. However, he stressed that leaving OSHA is corollary to what he sees as the larger point of the Special Session, which is making sure people don’t lose their jobs because of failure to comply with both federal and corporate vaccine mandates.

“I think it’s an appropriate response, given how heavy-handed OSHA is being,” DeSantis said.

Twenty-two states have an OSHA-approved state program, while five states have programs that apply only to public sector employees.

Getting a state plan approved is not something that would happen overnight. There is a process that requires federal authorities to examine state efforts and ensure standards for worker protections are as effective as federal regulations.

To gain initial approval, states must assure OSHA they will have enough staff and regulations in place within three years. Once a state gains approval, it is eligible for federal funding to help pay for the program. Once OSHA gives its final approval, it relinquishes authority.

House Speaker Chris Sprowls on Monday called the measure a “plan for the future.” However, he noted he believes the OSHA vaccine rules, which also include an opt-out if employees undergo weekly testing, won’t stand up in federal court.

“The looming deadline during the upcoming holiday season, imposed by the federal vaccine mandate, is making the silent night the stressful night for many families in Florida,” Zika said Wednesday.

Simpson on Monday told reporters the OSHA approval process depends on who gets elected in 2024, noting the plan must go through the federal government. But as far as the federal government’s decision to impose what he called an unconstitutional mandate, the Senate President asked what comes next.

The Senate is expected to take up the House bill or its Senate companion (SB 6B), carried by St. Augustine Republican Sen. Travis Hutson, Wednesday afternoon. The Senate could give the bill final legislative approval by Thursday, sending it to the Governor’s desk.

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Robert S. Warner, Jr.
Robert S. Warner, Jr. (@guest_63203)
2 years ago

Get sick. Get injured on the job. Corporate ownership is now laughing. Despite the complaints, Federal oversight of our working conditions is good for all those that work for a living, not those that “own” those that work for them. DeSantis has now muddled the entire concept – and turned every workplace injury into a legal confrontation.

Doug Mowery
Doug Mowery(@douglasm)
2 years ago

I believe it was reported here in the FO a couple of weeks ago that 22 or 23 states have already done this. Florida is not the outlier on this one. The article detailed all the steps required to ensure compliance by states that opt out. I have not heard of any negative repercussions from this act in those states.

What caused the other states to take this road over the years? For Florida the camel’s straw was obviously the recent vaccination mandate…..which OSHA has now suspended due to a ton of lawsuits from State AG’s. OSHA overstepped on this one, IMO, and they’ll have their day in court soon. Stay tuned…..

Mark Tomes
Trusted Member
Mark Tomes(@mtomes)
2 years ago

Another hypocritical move by Republicans. They want to duplicate a very successful federal program, at a cost to taxpayers of millions of dollars, to support their corporate donors.

Jeffrey Bazemore
Jeffrey Bazemore (@guest_63226)
2 years ago
Reply to  Mark Tomes

Mark, with all do respect(in a Ricky Bobby way), clearly you have not worked on a construction site lately. OSHA has long overstepped their charter. They don’t help the worker or the business do task safely, they simply help themselves and the Safety Industrial Complex perpetuate regulatory muck(and pay their salaries, their conferences, their programs) . As a construction company, if your are lucky, you will get 6 hours of work in an 8 hour day because of insipid OSHA Rules . This is not a Republican or Democrat issue, this is an over-regulation issue.

Doug Mowery
Doug Mowery(@douglasm)
2 years ago
Reply to  Mark Tomes

Hypocritical move by Republicans? Have you looked at the list of 22 states that have already done what Florida is now doing? Those Republican strongholds of California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii are on the list……

Your consistent bashing of our Republican State legislature, no matter whether the idea is good or bad, is duly noted.