Keeping Workers Safe During Oil Spill Response and Cleanup Operations
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RestoreTheGulf
Official Federal Portal for the Deepwater BP Oil Spill Response and Recovery

Career One Stop
CareerOneStop's Deepwater Horizon Response site provides quick access to a range of employment and related resources for individuals impacted by the emergency in the Gulf of Mexico. 1-866-4-USA-DOL
(1-866-487-2365)     TTY: 1-877-5627

Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: OSHA's Role in the Response [332 KB PDF**, 39 pages]


David Michaels talked about the role of OSHA in protecting those who are helping to clean up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
C-Span Video, Dr. Michaels Interviewed on OSHA Efforts to protect clean-up workers [Transcript]

Oil spill images
Photos from OSHA Response

Oil spill images
Labor Secretary, Hilda L. Solis, and OSHA Assistant Secretary, David Michaels, met with beach cleanup workers in Port Fourchon and discussed worker safety efforts with OSHA staff in Houma, La.

Government Resources
If you have symptoms or questions, and want to report them to OSHA, contact
1-800-321-OSHA (6742)
TTY: 877-889-5627

OSHA Response
By the Numbers
4/26 thru 10/1/10
Site visits by OSHA personnel* 4,266
Exposure Assessments 7,439
OSHA personnel:  
  Permanently assigned to Gulf 146

*Site Visits cover vessels of opportunity, Staging areas, decontamination, distribution, and deployment sites

OSHA Presence and Chemical Sampling in the Gulf

Additional Info

OSHA's Efforts to Protect Workers

Every day OSHA has over 146 professionals protecting workers throughout the Gulf. From April 26th through October 1st, between 20-40 were assigned solely to the Oil Spill Response. OSHA personnel have been deployed to all staging areas in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida. OSHA staff were on the ground and on boats to make sure BP was protecting cleanup workers from health and safety hazards.

OSHA worked as part of the coordinated federal response which included the U.S. Coast Guard and other government agencies that deal with health and the environment to evaluate BP's efforts and make sure BP put in place all of the precautions needed to protect workers from the hazards associated with cleanup work. When OSHA found problems or learned about them from workers, we immediately brought them to the attention of BP and monitored the situation until they were corrected. OSHA also raised its concerns throughout the Unified Command so they could be addressed across the entire response area. See OSHA's Activity Fact Sheet for more information.

Exposure to Toxic Chemicals. To determine whether or not workers are exposed to dangerous levels of toxic chemicals, OSHA conducted its own independent air monitoring, both on shore and on the cleanup vessels, and is reviewed data from BP, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). To date, no air sampling by OSHA has detected any hazardous chemical at levels of concern. See more information on OSHA's sampling strategy, detailed findings, and evaluations. Read our frequently asked questions on health hazards and protections, including information on respirators and other personal protective equipment.

Training is important. To work in the cleanup, you must be trained on the hazards of your job in a language that you understand. You must be trained before you begin oil spill response and cleanup work. Read OSHA's fact sheet on training requirements for the DeepWater Horizon oil spill response.

Worker Protection. To help workers understand their risks and what their employers should be doing to protect them, OSHA has developed a series of job-specific sheets. Each sheet provides information on the hazards associated with the task and required training and PPE. These sheets will be updated if conditions change. Read the current Worker Protection Information page for Job-Specific Safety and Health Sheets, BP PPE Matrix, and other valuable worker protection information. Employers must provide workers with all required protective equipment (for example: protective gloves, boots and coveralls) free of cost.Additional publications on work hazards.

Heat Stress. One of the most serious health hazards facing cleanup workers is heat stress. The risk from the heat and humidity is exacerbated by the long days worked and the protective equipment required, e.g. chemical resistant Tyvek coveralls, boots and gloves. More than a thousand workers have already been treated for heat-related illness, and some cases were very serious. At OSHA's urging, BP implemented at all work sites a heat stress management plan that includes a matrix setting out specific work/rest requirements based on the heat, relative humidity, and the protective equipment worn by all workers. See more information on heat stress and other hazards.

Injuries & Illness. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has conducted a number of studies of worker exposures and work related injuries and illnesses among oil spill response workers. NIOSH has launched a wide-ranging Health Hazard Evaluation (HHE) of the work associated with the response and cleanup. It has published six HHE reports that cover a variety of oil spill operations. The latest report discusses two investigations: one involving a health symptom survey of offshore response workers and one investigation involving an analysis of response workers hospitalizations. In the first investigation, NIOSH surveyed offshore workers and asked them about their symptoms and their exposures to oil and dispersants while working offshore. Analysis showed increased reports of upper respiratory irritation and cough associated with oil and dispersant exposure but did not account for other factors like exposure to road and gravel dust at the marina docks. The second investigation provided more information about the investigation of the seven fishermen who were hospitalized in May and reported in HHE interim report 1. It also contains information about ten additional hospitalizations not reported in HEE interim report 1. Heat illness was likely responsible for five of the newest hospitalized workers’ conditions, and information regarding the effects of oil and dispersant exposure was inconclusive. Read the full report on health symptoms of offshore response workers and worker hospitalizations. NIOSH's other reports evaluate worker exposures during operations including vessels of opportunity operations, drilling operations, in-situ burning, barge oil vacuuming, oil dispersant application (Corexit EC9500A, evaluated in Interim Reports 1 and 3), skimming, and wildlife cleaning and rehabilitation and follow the hospitalization of seven fishermen on May 22nd. One of the reports also summarizes findings from the review of the injury and illness logs from an infirmary in Venice, LA. Read the full reports and see the latest updates on NIOSH's Deepwater Horizon Health Hazard Evaluation activities. NIOSH has also analyzed BP's response-wide worker injury and illness logs. Through July 27th. 86% of cases required first aid only. They found that heat stress and heat effects were the most prevalent illness. In addition to illnesses from heat stress, the logs included 171 instances with multiple symptoms, many of which were consistent with heat stress. The most common injuries onshore and offshore are cuts and bruises, as well as insect bites/stings for onshore workers and sprains for those working offshore. See the full NIOSH Injury & Illness Report or the BP Deepwater Horizon Recordable Injury and Illness Data.

You can stay updated on OSHA monitoring data and all other activity by reading the Oil Spill Response Activity Report, regularly updated.


Accessibility Assistance: Contact the OSHA Directorate of Technical Support and Emergency Management at (202) 693-2300 for assistance accessing PDF materials.

**These files are provided for downloading.