How does OSHA define a "company parking lot" for purposes of Recordkeeping?

Frequently Asked Questions

Question: How does OSHA define a "company parking lot" for purposes of Recordkeeping?

Answer:

Company parking lots are part of the employer's premises and therefore part of the establishment. These areas are under the control of the employer, i.e. those parking areas where the employer can limit access (such as parking lots limited to the employer's employees and visitors). On the other hand, a parking area where the employer does not have control (such as a parking lot outside of a building shared by different employers, or a public parking area like those found at a mall or beneath a multi-employer office building) would not be considered part of the employers establishment (except for the owner of the building or mall), and therefore not a company parking lot for purposes of OSHA recordkeeping.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

This question involves the following sequence of events: Employee A drives to work, parks her car in the company parking lot and is walking across the lot when she is struck by a car driven by employee B, who is commuting to work. Both employees are seri

Frequently Asked Questions

Question: This question involves the following sequence of events: Employee A drives to work, parks her car in the company parking lot and is walking across the lot when she is struck by a car driven by employee B, who is commuting to work. Both employees are seri

Answer:

Neither employee's injuries are recordable. While the employee parking lot is part of the work environment under section 1904.5, injuries occurring there are not work-related if they meet the exception in section 1904.5(b)(2)(vii). Section 1904.5(b)(2)(vii) excepts injuries caused by motor vehicle accidents occurring on the company parking lot while the employee is commuting to and from work. In the case in question, both employees' injuries resulted from a motor vehicle accident in the company parking lot while the employees were commuting. Accordingly, the exception applies.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.

If a maintenance employee is cleaning the parking lot or an access road and is injured as a result, is the case work-related?

Frequently Asked Questions

Question: If a maintenance employee is cleaning the parking lot or an access road and is injured as a result, is the case work-related?

Answer:

Yes, the case is work-related because the employee is injured as a result of conducting company business in the work environment. If the injury meets the general recording criteria of Section 1904.7 (death, days away, etc.), the case must be recorded.

For more information, explore OSHA's Recordkeeping Requirements.