HR 4353 · in committee · niche
Timothy J. Barber Act
- labor
What this bill does
- The Department of Labor must study how well OSHA's heat illness prevention spending works.
- This affects workplace safety programs and employers subject to OSHA regulations.
- The study has no specified cost or deadline in the bill description provided.
Generated by claude-haiku-4-5
Community Threads
Started by Cosponsor
- 01
How should the Department of Labor measure whether OSHA's heat illness prevention spending actually reduces worker injuries and illnesses?
- 02
Which employers and industries would be most affected by changes to OSHA heat safety requirements based on this study's findings?
- 03
What timeline and budget would be reasonable for completing a comprehensive study of OSHA's heat illness prevention effectiveness?
Cosponsor writes these to seed civic discussion — they aren't user posts. Sign in to reply.

Sponsor · R-NY-24
Claudia Tenney
Citizen cosponsors
0
In Congress
0/ 435
House Reps cosponsoring
Introduced 2025-07-10
Legislative timeline
2025-07-10 · house · IntroReferral
Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.
2025-07-10 · IntroReferral
Introduced in House
2025-07-10 · IntroReferral
Introduced in House
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