Through its Official State Plan, which includes all employees of state and municipal governments as well as the majority of those employed in the private sector, Oregon, like many other states, promotes its own OSHA laws.
The bulk of OSHA regulations that relate to buildings managed by the federal, state, and local governments are followed by Oregon OSHA, but it also has the following special standards:
Construction
Sanitation
Noise Exposure
Excavations
Concrete and Masonry Construction
Steel Erection and Wood Framing
Electric Power Transmission and Distribution
Stairways and Ladders
Asbestos
Cadmium
Ethylenediamine
Lead
Cranes and Derricks
Flooring
Temporary Floors
Shoring, Bracing, or Guying of Structures
Project Plans
Air Contaminants
Hazardous Waste and Emergency Response
Respiratory Protection
Personal Protective Equipment
Traffic Control
Power-Actuated Tools
Working near Overhead High Voltage Lines and Equipment
Branch Circuits
Scaffolds
Fall Protection
Motor Vehicles and Mechanized Equipment
General Industry
Walking-Working Surfaces
Means of Egress
Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills; Paper Printing Operations
Sawmills and Other Wood Processing
Logging and Forestry
Telecommunications
Electric Power Generation, Transmission, and Distribution
Window Cleaning
Tree Care and Removal
Working near Overhead High Voltage Lines and Equipment
Commercial Diving
Air Contaminants
Bloodborne Pathogens
SHARPS Injury Log
Carcinogens in Laboratories
Pesticides and Fumigation
Hazard Communication
Illumination and Industrial Lighting
Manually Propelled Elevating Aerial Platforms
Scissor Lifts – Self-Propelled Elevating Work Platforms
Boom-Supported Elevating Work Platforms
Ventilation for Abrasive Blasting
Noise Exposure
Hazardous Materials and Processes
Personal Protective Equipment
Sanitation
Labor Camps
Accident Prevention and Tags
Confined Spaces
Hazardous Stored Energy (Lockout/Tagout)
Medical Services and First Aid
Protections for Firefighters
Portable Fire Extinguishers
Powered Industrial Trucks, Railcars, and Other Industrial Vehicles
Cranes and Derricks
Slings and other Hoisting Equipment
Aerial Cableways and Tramways
Woodworking and Metal Lathe Machinery
Mechanical, Hydraulic, Pneumatic, and Other Power Presses
Compactors, Balers, and Refuse Packing or Collection Equipment
Conveyors
Hand and Portable Powered Tools and Other Hand-Held Equipment
Welding, Cutting, and Brazing
Non-Industrial Motor Vehicles and the Transportation of Workers Over Land
Users of Oregon OSHA’s user-friendly application can read all rules that apply to people who are subject to State OSHA regulation in terms of their training obligations. For individuals who come under the Federal OSHA Authority, however, the U.S. OSHA publishes a paper stating the precise safety standards that demand training.
Workers in Oregon who are still subject to federal OSHA regulations include:
working for the government
Shipyards and boatyards on or adjacent to navigable waters, Marine Terminals, Marine Grain Terminal Operations, and Long Shoring (apart from production/manufacturing areas and their storage facilities), as well as commercial diving, construction from/on floating vessels, and all other jobs, are all private sector employment on or adjacent to navigable waters of the United States.
Jobs in the private sector are available close to Crater Lake National Park at the Albany Research Center of the United States Department of Energy (ARC) inside the boundaries of all Indian reservations.
The reserves for the federal military