>>Cal/OSHA Workplace Violence Prevention for General Industry (Non-Health Care Settings)
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April 12, 2024MODEL WRITTEN WORKPLACE VIOLENCE PREVENTION PLAN for GENERAL INDUSTRY (NON-HEALTHCARE SETTINGS)
This is a fillable template that the employer must complete. Instructions in red font enclosed in brackets indicate where you must enter your worksite-specific information.
This is a fillable template that the employer must complete. Instructions in red font enclosed in brackets indicate where you must enter your worksite-specific information.
Overview and directions for using the model plan
Who is this model plan for? As a result of California Senate Bill 553 (SB 553), all employers that fall within the scope of California Labor Code (LC) 6401.7 and LC 6401.9 , are required to establish, implement, and maintain an effective, written Workplace Violence Prevention Plan (WVPP) no later than July 1, 2024. Employers with workplaces covered by California Code of Regulations (CCR), Title 8, section 3342 Violence Prevention in Health Care should not use this model program, but instead implement the requirements of section 3342.
What does the model plan include?
Employers are not required to use this model WVPP. They may create their own, use another WVPP template, or incorporate workplace violence prevention into their existing Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) as a separate section. Cal/OSHA requires employers to engage with employees in developing and implementing their WVPP. This model plan is intended to help employers develop a separate, stand-alone Workplace Violence Prevention Plan (WVPP). It was written for a broad spectrum of employers, and it may not match your establishment’s exact needs. However, it provides the essential framework to identify, evaluate, and control workplace violence hazards.
Use of this model program does not ensure compliance with LC section 6401.9. Employers are liable for any violations of LC section 6401.9 regardless of use of this model program.
How to put the model program to use?
Proper use of this model program requires the employer to identify and ensure that the person or person(s) responsible for implementing the plan:
· Review the full requirements of LC sections 6401.7 and 6401.9.
· Review the requirements for each of the WVPP elements found in this model plan, ensure workplace violence concerns are incorporated, fill in the appropriate blank spaces/instructions in red font enclosed in brackets, and check those items that are applicable to their workplace · Read https://www.dir.ca.gov/dosh/Workplace-Violence.html for additional guidance.
· Obtain the active involvement of employees and their authorized employee representatives in developing and implementing the plan.
· Make the plan available and easily accessible to affected employees, authorized employee representatives, and representatives of Cal/OSHA at all times.
Copyright © 2024 State of California, Department of Industrial Relations. Permission granted to display, perform, reproduce, and distribute exclusively for nonprofit and educational purposes, and may not be used for any commercial purpose. All other rights reserved.
WORKPLACE VIOLENCE PREVENTION PROGRAM for
[Name of Employer]
Our establishment’s Workplace Violence Prevention Plan (WVPP) addresses the hazards known to be associated with the four types of workplace violence as defined by Labor Code (LC) section 6401.9.
Date of Last Review: [Type the date the last review was done to the plan]
Date of Last Revision(s): [Type the date the last revision(s) (if any) were made to the plan]
DEFINITIONS
Emergency – Unanticipated circumstances that can be life threatening or pose a risk of significant injuries to employees or other persons.
Engineering controls – An aspect of the built space or a device that removes a hazard from the workplace or creates a barrier between the employee and the hazard.
Log – The violent incident log required by LC section 6401.9.
Plan – The workplace violence prevention plan required by LC section 6401.9.
Serious injury or illness – Any injury or illness occurring in a place of employment or in connection with any employment that requires inpatient hospitalization for other than medical observation or diagnostic testing, or in which an employee suffers an amputation, the loss of an eye, or any serious degree of permanent disfigurement, but does not include any injury or illness or death caused by an accident on a public street or highway, unless the accident occurred in a construction zone.
Threat of violence – Any verbal or written statement, including, but not limited to, texts, electronic messages, social media messages, or other online posts, or any behavioral or physical conduct, that conveys an intent, or that is reasonably perceived to convey an intent, to cause physical harm or to place someone in fear of physical harm, and that serves no legitimate purpose.
Workplace violence – Any act of violence or threat of violence that occurs in a place of employment.
Workplace violence includes, but is not limited to, the following:
· The threat or use of physical force against an employee that results in, or has a high likelihood of resulting in, injury, psychological trauma, or stress, regardless of whether the employee sustains an injury.
· An incident involving a threat or use of a firearm or other dangerous weapon, including the use of common objects as weapons, regardless of whether the employee sustains an injury.
· The following four workplace violence types:
Type 1 violence – Workplace violence committed by a person who has no legitimate business at the worksite, and includes violent acts by anyone who enters the workplace or approaches employees with the intent to commit a crime.
Type 2 violence – Workplace violence directed at employees by customers, clients, patients, students, inmates, or visitors.
Type 3 violence – Workplace violence against an employee by a present or former employee,
supervisor, or manager.
Type 4 violence – Workplace violence committed in the workplace by a person who does not work there, but has or is known to have had a personal relationship with an employee.
Workplace violence does not include lawful acts of self-defense or defense of others.
Workplace violence does not include lawful acts of self-defense or defense of others.
Work practice controls – Procedures and rules which are used to effectively reduce workplace violence hazards