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 Roofing 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 Roofing 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 Roofing Contractors
Roofing is consistently ranked among the most dangerous construction trades. OSHA conducts targeted enforcement in roofing — a visible crew on a roof without fall protection will almost certainly trigger an inspection.
- Falls from roof edges and openings (29 CFR 1926.501(b)(1)) — Roofing has the highest fall fatality rate of any construction trade. Every unprotected edge, skylight, and roof opening over 6 feet requires guardrails, safety nets, or personal fall arrest.
- Heat illness and sun exposure (OSHA General Duty Clause) — Roofers work in direct sun on surfaces that can exceed 150°F. Heat stroke, heat exhaustion, and UV exposure are occupational hazards requiring water, rest, shade protocols.
- Chemical exposure from roofing materials (29 CFR 1926.55) — Hot tar, adhesives, solvents, and spray foam release toxic fumes. Roofers need proper respiratory protection and ventilation, especially in hot-applied roofing.
- Ladder and access point hazards (29 CFR 1926.1053) — Improper ladder setup for roof access is one of the most-cited violations in roofing. Ladders must extend 3 feet above the landing and be secured against displacement.
- Structural collapse and overloading (29 CFR 1926.250) — Stacking materials on a roof beyond its load capacity can cause structural failure. Roofers must assess load limits before staging materials, especially on older structures.
Most-cited violations for Roofing Contractors: Fall protection (1926.501), ladders (1926.1053), scaffolding (1926.451), hazard communication (1910.1200), and eye/face protection (1926.102)
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))