Why Michigan Is Different
Michigan operates its own OSHA-approved State Plan, administered by MIOSHA (Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration) under Michigan Administrative Code R 408 (Construction Safety Standards, CS Parts); MIOSHA Act 154 of 1974. This means Michigan doesn't just follow federal OSHA — it sets and enforces its own workplace safety standards that can be stricter than federal minimums.
For HVAC & Plumbing Contractors operating in Michigan, this means you need to meet Michigan-specific requirements, not just the federal baseline. MIOSHA (Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration) conducts its own inspections, issues its own citations, and sets its own penalty amounts.
Michigan requires 3 additional programs beyond federal OSHA that directly affect HVAC & Plumbing Contractors.
Penalty Snapshot
- Serious violation: up to $7,000 per citation
- Willful/repeat violation: up to $70,000 per citation
- Criminal penalties: Yes — willful violations causing death may result in criminal prosecution
- Penalties currently LOWER than federal. SB 49-50 (pending Oct 2025) would align to federal levels (~$16,550 serious/$165,514 willful). Criminal: $10,000 fine / 1 year imprisonment for willful causing death.
Top Hazards for HVAC & Plumbing Contractors
HVAC and plumbing contractors face a unique combination of chemical, fall, and confined-space hazards that most other trades don't encounter together.
- Refrigerant and chemical exposure (29 CFR 1926.55) — HVAC technicians handle refrigerants (R-410A, R-32) that can cause asphyxiation in confined spaces and chemical burns on skin contact. Proper ventilation and PPE are mandatory.
- Falls from rooftops and ladders (29 CFR 1926.501) — Rooftop HVAC unit installation and maintenance is high-fall-risk work. Leading edges, skylights, and roof hatches all require fall protection systems.
- Torch and soldering burn hazards (29 CFR 1926.352) — Brazing copper lines and soldering joints creates fire and burn risks. Hot work permits, fire watches, and proper ventilation are required on most sites.
- Confined space entry (29 CFR 1926.1200) — Plumbers and HVAC techs regularly work in crawl spaces, mechanical rooms, and duct shafts that qualify as permit-required confined spaces.
- Asbestos and lead exposure (29 CFR 1926.1101) — Older buildings contain asbestos in pipe insulation and duct wrap. HVAC and plumbing contractors disturbing these materials must follow OSHA's asbestos standards.
Most-cited violations for HVAC & Plumbing Contractors: Fall protection (1926.501), hazard communication (1910.1200), respiratory protection (1910.134), scaffolding (1926.451), and confined spaces (1926.1200)
Required Programs Beyond Federal OSHA
- worker_intoxication_policy
- miosha_hazcom
- miosha_lockout_tagout
Key Regulatory Differences from Federal OSHA
- Lockout Tagout: MIOSHA construction LOTO standard exceeds federal 1926.417 — additional written procedures required
- Scaffolds: MIOSHA CS Part 12 — state-specific scaffold requirements
- Excavations: MIOSHA CS Part 9 — state-specific excavation/trenching provisions
- Steel Erection: MIOSHA CS Part 26 — state-specific (updated August 2025)
- Ppe: MIOSHA CS Part 6 (updated August 2025) — PPE fit requirement for all workers adopted
- Injury Reporting: Fatality = 8 hours (800-858-0397 MIOSHA hotline). Hospitalization/amputation/eye = 24 hours.
- Posting: MIOSHA poster required alongside federal poster
- Penalty Note: Current serious max $7,000 — lower than federal. SB 49-50 (pending 2025) would raise to ~$16,550 federal level.