VA State Plan

General Contractor OSHA Compliance in Virginia (2026)

Enforced by VOSH (Virginia Occupational Safety and Health) · Willful violations up to $162,849

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 General 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 General 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 General Contractors

General contractors face unique multi-employer liability — OSHA can cite the GC as the controlling employer even when a subcontractor created the hazard.

  • Falls from elevation (29 CFR 1926.501) — Falls are the #1 killer in construction. GCs are responsible for fall protection on multi-employer sites even for subcontractor crews working at heights.
  • Struck-by objects (29 CFR 1926.602) — Falling tools, swinging loads, and vehicle strikes. GCs managing multiple trades on-site face compounded struck-by risk from overlapping operations.
  • Trenching and excavation collapse (29 CFR 1926.652) — Trench collapses kill fast. GCs must ensure protective systems (sloping, shoring, shielding) are in place before any worker enters an excavation over 5 feet.
  • Scaffolding hazards (29 CFR 1926.451) — Improperly erected scaffolds account for thousands of citations annually. GCs must verify scaffold competency and inspection schedules on their sites.
  • Multi-employer site coordination (Multi-employer citation policy) — As the controlling employer, GCs can be cited for hazards created by subcontractors. Site safety coordination and daily walkthroughs are essential.

Most-cited violations for General Contractors: Fall protection (1926.501), scaffolding (1926.451), ladders (1926.1053), hazard communication (1910.1200), and excavation/trenching (1926.652)

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))

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the OSHA penalty amounts for General Contractors in Virginia?
In Virginia, VOSH (Virginia Occupational Safety and Health) enforces penalties up to $16,287 for serious violations and $162,849 for willful or repeat violations. Criminal penalties including jail time may apply for willful violations resulting in death. Actual fines depend on violation gravity, employer size, good faith, and history.
Does Virginia have its own OSHA program or follow federal OSHA?
Virginia operates a State Plan approved by federal OSHA, 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 sets its own standards, conducts its own inspections, and can enforce requirements stricter than federal OSHA. General Contractors must follow Virginia's state-specific rules, not just federal minimums.
What safety programs are required for General Contractors in Virginia beyond federal OSHA?
Virginia requires several programs beyond federal baseline: reverse_signal_operation, manufacturer_specs_compliance, steel_erection_10ft. These are mandatory for all covered employers including General Contractors. Failure to have written programs can result in citations even without an incident.
What is the fall protection threshold for General Contractors in Virginia?
Virginia follows the federal fall protection threshold of 6 feet for construction activities. General Contractors must provide fall protection (guardrails, safety nets, or personal fall arrest systems) at or above this height.
How do I get my GC company compliant with Virginia OSHA requirements?
Start with a written safety program that covers all Virginia-specific requirements including reverse_signal_operation and manufacturer_specs_compliance. Train supervisors on state-specific rules. Document everything — VOSH (Virginia Occupational Safety and Health) inspectors look for written programs, training records, and hazard assessments. CrewCompliance generates Virginia-specific safety programs customized to your trade and crew size.

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