Tumwater, WA – As the number of COVID-19 cases grows in Washington, so does the number of complaints about workplaces violating state Safe Start and masking requirements.
Complaints about possible violations are up substantially this week after Gov. Jay Inslee announced new restrictions to help curtail the growing pandemic.
The Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) is one of the state agencies charged with helping make sure employers are following state requirements to protect employees and their communities during the pandemic.
L&I looks into public complaints with a goal of informing employers to ensure they know and understand the requirements. Nearly all of those complaints come through the state Emergency Operations Center (EOC). Businesses that refuse to enforce mask requirements or do not follow the governor’s proclamations face possible citations and fines.
Complaints by workers are sent directly to L&I’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health (DOSH) for immediate evaluation. Those businesses may be inspected without prior outreach.
“This is about the safety of workers and protecting our communities,” said Anne Soiza, L&I assistant director for DOSH. ”We know how very hard this is for everyone, but it’s going to take all of us working together to drive the number of new cases down.”
L&I has investigated thousands of complaints regarding masking violations since July. Most of the companies the agency contacted agreed to follow requirements without the state taking formal action, but a small number have not.
L&I has cited 20 businesses for mask violations since July as a result of EOC complaints and a few public complaints that came directly to the agency. Many other DOSH inspections take place each day that may result in COVID-19 citations that are not in response to complaints to the EOC.
In October alone, L&I received more than 1,300 complaints about businesses not enforcing mask use rules with their employees and customers. In the last week, the number of new complaints has tripled.
Safe Start violations
Along with masking enforcement, L&I is also looking into complaints about businesses that are not supposed to be open or are required to limit service under the governor’s proclamations.
In September and October, three trampoline businesses were cited for violating the governor’s original Safe Start proclamation issued July 24, 2020. That order prohibited most businesses from operating unless their county is in the appropriate phase of the statewide plan to reopen, and the businesses follow specific safety requirements.
Source: WA L&I