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During a safety inspection, OSHA identifies a serious violation that requires immediate correction. What is the contractor's primary obligation?

Correct Answer

D) Immediately correct the hazard and document the corrective action

Serious violations that pose immediate danger must be corrected immediately to protect worker safety. Documentation of the corrective action is also required to demonstrate compliance with OSHA requirements.

Answer Options
A
Continue work while preparing a response
B
Schedule the correction within 30 days
C
File an appeal before making any changes
D
Immediately correct the hazard and document the corrective action

Why This Is the Correct Answer

When OSHA identifies a serious violation requiring immediate correction, the contractor must stop the hazardous activity and fix the problem right away to protect worker safety. OSHA's primary concern is preventing injuries or fatalities, so immediate corrective action takes precedence over all other considerations. The contractor must also document what corrective measures were taken to prove compliance and maintain records for future inspections. Delaying correction of serious safety hazards exposes workers to continued risk and can result in additional penalties.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: Continue work while preparing a response

Continuing work while a serious safety violation exists is prohibited and extremely dangerous. This would expose workers to continued risk and could result in additional citations and penalties from OSHA.

Option B: Schedule the correction within 30 days

A 30-day correction period applies to non-serious violations or violations that don't pose immediate danger. Serious violations requiring immediate correction cannot wait 30 days as this would continue to expose workers to significant safety hazards.

Memory Technique

Think 'STOP-FIX-DOC': Stop the hazardous work, Fix the problem immediately, Document the corrective action. Safety violations don't wait for paperwork!

Reference Hint

OSHA Construction Standards 29 CFR 1926 - General Safety and Health Provisions, Chapter on Inspection Procedures and Citation Requirements

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