EstatePass
Business & FinanceOperationsmedium10% of exam part

A general contractor must maintain OSHA Form 300 (Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses) for how many years after the end of the calendar year that these records cover?

Correct Answer

B) 5 years

OSHA requires employers to maintain Form 300, Form 300A, and Form 301 for five years following the end of the calendar year that these records cover. This ensures adequate time for OSHA inspections and reviews.

Answer Options
A
3 years
B
5 years
C
7 years
D
10 years

Why This Is the Correct Answer

OSHA regulation 29 CFR 1904.33 specifically requires employers to maintain OSHA Form 300 (Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses), Form 300A (Summary), and Form 301 (Incident Report) for five years following the end of the calendar year that these records cover. This five-year retention period allows sufficient time for OSHA compliance officers to conduct inspections and review workplace safety records. The regulation ensures that injury and illness data remains available for trend analysis and enforcement purposes.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: 3 years

Three years is insufficient under OSHA regulations and would not provide adequate time for comprehensive safety record reviews and inspections.

Option C: 7 years

Seven years exceeds the OSHA requirement and confuses this with other business record retention periods such as tax records.

Option D: 10 years

Ten years is far longer than required by OSHA and may confuse this with other long-term record retention requirements in construction.

Memory Technique

Think 'OSHA 5-5-5': Form 300 series records kept for 5 years, and remember that 5 fingers on a hand represents the 5-year retention period.

Reference Hint

OSHA Construction Standards 29 CFR 1926 or OSHA General Industry Standards 29 CFR 1904.33 - Retention and updating of records

More Business & Finance Questions

People Also Study

Practice More Contractor Exam Questions

Access all practice questions with progress tracking and adaptive difficulty to pass your Florida General Contractor exam.

Start Practicing