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Bill > A1995


NJ A1995

NJ A1995
Establishes "Occupational Heat-Related Illness and Injury Prevention Program" and occupational heat stress standard in DOLWD.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill requires the Commissioner of Labor and Workforce Development to establish by rule a heat stress standard that contains the following: (1) a standard that establishes heat stress levels for employees that, if exceeded, trigger actions by employers to protect employees from heat-related illness and injury; and (2) a requirement that each employer develop, implement, and maintain an effective heat-related illness and injury prevention plan for employees. The commissioner is required to develop a model heat-related illness and injury prevention plan, consistent with the provisions of the bill, that employers may adopt. Employers may develop their own heat-related illness and injury prevention plan consistent with the provisions of the bill. The heat-related illness and injury prevention plan is required, to the extent permitted by federal law, to be developed and implemented with the meaningful participation of employees and employee representatives, including collective bargaining representatives; will be tailored and specific to the hazards in the place of employment; will be in writing in both English and in the language that each employee understands, if that language is not English; and will be made available at a time and in a manner set forth by the commissioner in rule, to employees, employee representatives, including collective bargaining representatives, and to the commissioner. The bill provides that the commissioner may issue a stop-work order against the employer requiring cessation of all business operations of the employer at one or more worksites or across all of the employer's worksites and places of business if the commissioner determines, after either an initial determination as a result of an audit of a business or an investigation pursuant to the bill, that an employer is in violation of the bill's provisions. Under the bill, after initially creating a heat-related illness and injury prevention plan, employers will be required to conduct an annual review to determine whether revisions to their plans are necessary. The bill requires that State law align with federal law should a federal law or regulation establish a heat stress standard that is more favorable to employees than State law. The bill exempts amusement parks and certain operations that are directly involved in the protection of life or property, such as evacuation, rescue, medical, structural firefighting, law enforcement, lifeguarding, or the emergency restoration of essential services, such as roads, bridges, utilities, and communications, when employees are engaged in those operations, from the bill's provisions. The bill addresses its application to collective bargaining agreements, including, but not limited to, circumstances in which the heat standards do not apply to certain collective bargaining agreements. The bill provides the Department of Agriculture with the power to develop a heat standard for commercial farm operators in consultation with the Department of Labor and Workforce Development and Department of Health and with advice and input from the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station at Rutgers University, and the bill otherwise excludes commercial farms from its requirements. Finally, the bill imposes monetary and other penalties for violations of its provisions.

AI Summary

This bill establishes an "Occupational Heat-Related Illness and Injury Prevention Program" and a heat stress standard within the Department of Labor and Workforce Development (DOLWD) to protect workers from the dangers of excessive heat. The Commissioner of DOLWD is required to create rules by June 1, 2025, that define heat stress levels triggering employer actions and mandate that employers develop and implement heat illness prevention plans. These plans must involve employees and their representatives, be specific to workplace hazards, and be written in languages employees understand. The Commissioner will also provide a model plan for employers to adopt or adapt. The bill allows the Commissioner to issue stop-work orders for violations and imposes monetary penalties. It requires annual reviews of prevention plans and mandates that state law align with more favorable federal heat standards if they exist. Certain entities are exempt, including amusement parks and operations directly involved in protecting life or property, such as emergency services. Commercial farms are generally excluded but will have their own heat standard developed by the Department of Agriculture in consultation with DOLWD and the Department of Health. The bill also addresses how it interacts with collective bargaining agreements, ensuring that existing protections are not diminished and outlining specific exemptions for certain construction and port-related work covered by collective bargaining agreements.

Committee Categories

Labor and Employment

Sponsors (6)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Labor Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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