Why Virginia Is Different
Virginia operates its own OSHA-approved State Plan, administered by VOSH (Virginia Occupational Safety and Health) under Virginia Administrative Code Title 16, Agency 25; Code of Virginia Title 40.1. This means Virginia doesn't just follow federal OSHA — it sets and enforces its own workplace safety standards that can be stricter than federal minimums.
For Electrical Contractors operating in Virginia, this means you need to meet Virginia-specific requirements, not just the federal baseline. VOSH (Virginia Occupational Safety and Health) conducts its own inspections, issues its own citations, and sets its own penalty amounts.
Virginia requires 3 additional programs beyond federal OSHA that directly affect Electrical Contractors.
Penalty Snapshot
- Serious violation: up to $16,287 per citation
- Willful/repeat violation: up to $162,849 per citation
- Criminal penalties: Yes — willful violations causing death may result in criminal prosecution
- Willful causing death: up to $70,000 fine + 6 months imprisonment. Second conviction doubles max.
Top Hazards for Electrical Contractors
Electrical contractors have the highest electrocution fatality rate of any construction trade. OSHA prioritizes electrical inspections on active construction sites.
- Electrocution and electrical burns (29 CFR 1926.405) — Electrocution is one of OSHA's "Fatal Four" in construction. Working on or near energized circuits without proper lockout/tagout is the leading cause.
- Arc flash exposure (NFPA 70E / 29 CFR 1926.407) — Arc flash can reach 35,000°F. Electrical contractors must perform arc flash risk assessments and provide appropriate PPE rated for incident energy levels.
- Falls during overhead work (29 CFR 1926.501) — Electrical work frequently requires ladder and scaffold use. Falls during panel installation, conduit runs, and overhead wiring are a leading injury cause.
- Lockout/tagout failures (29 CFR 1910.147) — Failure to de-energize and lock out circuits before service work. Every electrical contractor needs written LOTO procedures for each type of equipment serviced.
- Confined space entry (29 CFR 1926.1200) — Electrical contractors often work in vaults, manholes, and transformer rooms classified as confined spaces requiring permits, atmospheric testing, and rescue plans.
Most-cited violations for Electrical Contractors: Electrical wiring methods (1926.405), lockout/tagout (1910.147), fall protection (1926.501), PPE (1926.95), and hazard communication (1910.1200)
Required Programs Beyond Federal OSHA
- reverse_signal_operation
- manufacturer_specs_compliance
- steel_erection_10ft
Key Regulatory Differences from Federal OSHA
- Steel Erection Fall Protection: 10 feet (16VAC25-145) — stricter than federal 15 feet
- Reverse Signal: 16VAC25-97 requires written procedures + signal persons when vehicle rear view is obstructed — NO federal equivalent
- Manufacturer Specs: VOSH unique standard requires compliance with manufacturer specs for ALL machinery/equipment/tools — citable if exceeded even absent specific OSHA rule
- Heat Illness: NO state heat standard — general duty clause only (NOIRA filed 2020, no standard adopted)
- Injury Reporting: Fatality/catastrophe = 8 hours. Hospitalization/amputation/eye = 24 hours. (Code of Virginia §40.1-51.1.D)
- Posting: VOSH 'Job Safety and Health Protection' poster required alongside federal poster
- Vdot Contracts: State/DOT contracts require VDOT Work Area Protection Manual instead of federal MUTCD (16VAC25-60-130(D))