TEXO ABC/AGC Inc et al v. Perez et al

  1. February 28, 2017

    Unions Ask To Defend OSHA Rule In Case Trump DOL Won't

    The AFL-CIO and the United Steelworkers asked a Texas federal judge Monday to allow them to defend an anti-retaliation provision in the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's injury and reporting rule from a challenge by business groups, saying they need to intervene in case the Trump administration abandons its defense of the rule.

  2. January 20, 2017

    DOL Wants Judge To Toss Case Against Retaliation Rule

    The U.S. Department of Labor asked a Texas federal judge on Thursday to toss a case filed by numerous business groups challenging an anti-retaliation provision in the recently implemented injury and reporting rule by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, saying the rule doesn't hurt them.

  3. November 29, 2016

    OSHA Reporting Rule Can Take Effect, Judge Says

    A Texas federal judge on Monday refused to block several anti-retaliation provisions in the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's injury and reporting rule ahead of their scheduled Dec. 1 implementation, rejecting a request by numerous business groups for a national injunction while their legal challenge plays out.

  4. November 02, 2016

    Trade Groups Urge Nationwide Stay Of OSHA Reporting Rule

    A Texas federal court would not be out of line in issuing a nationwide injunction to halt an Occupational Safety and Health Administration rule barring post-accident drug testing, the National Association of Manufacturers, the Associated Builders and Contractors Inc. and other groups said Tuesday.

  5. August 22, 2016

    OSHA Fights Injunction Bid Over Injury Reporting Rule

    The Occupational Safety and Health Administration on Friday attacked as "meritless" an attempt by several groups of builders to argue that its new rule regarding workplace injury and illness reporting is an overreach because Congress authorized it to do "whatever it deems necessary" to ensure accurate recordkeeping.

  6. July 11, 2016

    OSHA Sued Over Drug-Test Limit In Accident Reporting Rule

    The National Association of Manufacturers, Associated Builders and Contractors Inc. and similar groups sued the Occupational Safety and Health Administration in Texas federal court on Friday over the agency's workplace injury and illness reporting rule, saying the measure contains anti-retaliation provisions that go too far in limiting post-accident drug-testing.

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