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HR 4353 · in committee · niche

Timothy J. Barber Act

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.

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Community Threads

Started by Cosponsor

  1. 01

    How should the Department of Labor measure whether OSHA's heat illness prevention spending actually reduces worker injuries and illnesses?

  2. 02

    Which employers and industries would be most affected by changes to OSHA heat safety requirements based on this study's findings?

  3. 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

  1. 2025-07-10 · house · IntroReferral

    Referred to the House Committee on Education and Workforce.

  2. 2025-07-10 · IntroReferral

    Introduced in House

  3. 2025-07-10 · IntroReferral

    Introduced in House

Congress.gov ↗

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