California 2025-2026 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB20 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Senate March 27, 2025 Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 20Introduced by Senator Menjivar(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Celeste Rodriguez)December 02, 2024 An act to add Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, relating to occupational safety and health. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 20, as amended, Menjivar. Occupational safety: fabrication activities on stone slab products. Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the department to promulgate occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.The bill would require, beginning January July 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health and the State Department of Public Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.The bill would prohibit, beginning January July 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.The bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of the bills provisions and a publicly accessible database that includes, among other things, information on includes information on, among other things, any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 258 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 15 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 30 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the Department of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D)Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i)The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii)The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I)The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II)The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii)The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv)The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division. (C)(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D)(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:(a)Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b)Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.(c)An(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
1+Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 20Introduced by Senator MenjivarDecember 02, 2024 An act to add Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, relating to occupational safety and health. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 20, as amended, Menjivar. Occupational safety: fabrication activities on stone slab products. Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the Department of Industrial Relations department to promulgate and enforce occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the Division of Occupational Safety and Health division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products. products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.Existing law establishes the State Department of Public Health, which is led by the State Public Health Officer, within the California Health and Human Services Agency. Existing law vests the department with certain duties, powers, functions, jurisdiction, and responsibilities over specified public health programs.The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the State Department of Public Health department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and licensing certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products unless the person or entity has without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.The bill would prohibit, beginning January 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that, among other things, that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.The bill would specify that a violation of any of the above-described provisions may be grounds for disciplinary action, as specified, but is not a crime. TheThe bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the State Public Health Officer Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes, among other things, information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the State Department of Public Health Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:(a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
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3- Amended IN Senate March 27, 2025 Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 20Introduced by Senator Menjivar(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Celeste Rodriguez)December 02, 2024 An act to add Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, relating to occupational safety and health. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 20, as amended, Menjivar. Occupational safety: fabrication activities on stone slab products. Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the department to promulgate occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.The bill would require, beginning January July 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health and the State Department of Public Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.The bill would prohibit, beginning January July 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.The bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of the bills provisions and a publicly accessible database that includes, among other things, information on includes information on, among other things, any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 20Introduced by Senator MenjivarDecember 02, 2024 An act to add Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, relating to occupational safety and health. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 20, as amended, Menjivar. Occupational safety: fabrication activities on stone slab products. Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the Department of Industrial Relations department to promulgate and enforce occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the Division of Occupational Safety and Health division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products. products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.Existing law establishes the State Department of Public Health, which is led by the State Public Health Officer, within the California Health and Human Services Agency. Existing law vests the department with certain duties, powers, functions, jurisdiction, and responsibilities over specified public health programs.The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the State Department of Public Health department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and licensing certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products unless the person or entity has without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.The bill would prohibit, beginning January 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that, among other things, that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.The bill would specify that a violation of any of the above-described provisions may be grounds for disciplinary action, as specified, but is not a crime. TheThe bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the State Public Health Officer Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes, among other things, information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
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5- Amended IN Senate March 27, 2025 Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025
5+ Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025
66
7-Amended IN Senate March 27, 2025
87 Amended IN Senate March 13, 2025
98
109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION
1110
1211 Senate Bill
1312
1413 No. 20
1514
16-Introduced by Senator Menjivar(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Celeste Rodriguez)December 02, 2024
15+Introduced by Senator MenjivarDecember 02, 2024
1716
18-Introduced by Senator Menjivar(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Celeste Rodriguez)
17+Introduced by Senator Menjivar
1918 December 02, 2024
2019
2120 An act to add Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, relating to occupational safety and health.
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2322 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2524 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
2625
2726 SB 20, as amended, Menjivar. Occupational safety: fabrication activities on stone slab products.
2827
29-Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the department to promulgate occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.The bill would require, beginning January July 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health and the State Department of Public Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.The bill would prohibit, beginning January July 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.The bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of the bills provisions and a publicly accessible database that includes, among other things, information on includes information on, among other things, any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
28+Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the Department of Industrial Relations department to promulgate and enforce occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the Division of Occupational Safety and Health division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products. products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.Existing law establishes the State Department of Public Health, which is led by the State Public Health Officer, within the California Health and Human Services Agency. Existing law vests the department with certain duties, powers, functions, jurisdiction, and responsibilities over specified public health programs.The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the State Department of Public Health department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and licensing certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products unless the person or entity has without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.The bill would prohibit, beginning January 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that, among other things, that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.The bill would specify that a violation of any of the above-described provisions may be grounds for disciplinary action, as specified, but is not a crime. TheThe bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the State Public Health Officer Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes, among other things, information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
3029
3130 Existing law establishes the Department of Industrial Relations in the Labor and Workforce Development Agency and requires the department to be conducted under the control of an executive officer known as the Director of Industrial Relations. Existing law states that the function of the department, among other things, is to foster, promote, and develop the welfare of the wage earners of California, to improve their working conditions, and to advance their opportunities for profitable employment and vests the department with responsibility for administering the state plan for the development and enforcement of occupational safety and health standards relating to issues covered by corresponding standards adopted pursuant to federal law.
3231
33-Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the department to promulgate occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.
32+Existing law establishes the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board within the Department of Industrial Relations department to promulgate and enforce occupational safety and health standards for the state, including standards dealing with exposure to harmful airborne contaminants. Existing law requires the Division of Occupational Safety and Health within the department to enforce all occupational safety and health standards, as specified. A violation of these standards and regulations under specific circumstances is a crime.
3433
35-This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.
34+This bill would impose restrictions on specified fabrication activities on certain stone slab products that are used for countertop installation or customization. Specifically, a person or entity engaged in those fabrication activities would be prohibited from using dry methods, and would be required to use effective wet methods, as specified. The bill would make a violation of these provisions grounds for, among other disciplinary action, an immediate order by the Division of Occupational Safety and Health division prohibiting continued fabrication activities on those stone slab products. products, but would specify that violation is not a crime.
3635
37-The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.
36+Existing law establishes the State Department of Public Health, which is led by the State Public Health Officer, within the California Health and Human Services Agency. Existing law vests the department with certain duties, powers, functions, jurisdiction, and responsibilities over specified public health programs.
3837
39-The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.
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41-The bill would require, beginning January July 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health and the State Department of Public Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.
4239
43-The bill would prohibit, beginning January July 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.
40+The bill would require, on or before July 1, 2026, the State Department of Public Health department to consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities on stone slab products that meets specified requirements, including classroom instruction, and to certify an individual who has completed that curriculum. Beginning July 1, 2027, the bill would require certain individuals, including an owner or operator of a stone slab product fabrication shop, to be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum, except as specified, before fabrication activity or employment begins, as described.
41+
42+The bill would require, on or before January 1, 2027, the department to develop an application and certification process for fabrication shops to lawfully engage in stone slab product fabrication activities. The bill would authorize fabrication shops to engage in those fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and licensing certification process. The bill would require the department to develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and certification subject to specified requirements, including that the deposit amount goes towards the initial certification fee collected by the department. The bill would require the department to create a statewide tracking system to track the number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit subject to specified requirements, including that the statewide tracking system is posted on the departments internet website and is made available to the public.
43+
44+The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the department to grant a 3-year certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates satisfaction of specified criteria involving workplace safety conditions and precautions, and would authorize certification renewal, as specified. Among other conditions, the bill would establish certain regulatory fees in amounts to be determined and adjusted by the department, as specified, for the certification and renewal thereof. The bill would authorize the department to suspend or revoke a certification in certain cases, including for gross negligence, as specified. The bill would require the department, in consultation with the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, to track and keep a record of specified information on fabrication shops, including the number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica, as specified. The bill would prohibit a person or entity, or an employee thereof, from engaging in fabrication activities on stone slab products unless the person or entity has without a certification. The bill would specify that a violation of that prohibition may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, but is not a crime.
45+
46+The bill would prohibit, beginning January 1, 2027, a person from supplying a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products if the person or entity does not have a valid certification. The bill would require a person that, among other things, that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities on those products to verify the person or entity has a certification, as specified. The bill would require a person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities to rely on written certification issued under penalty of perjury that, among other things, they will not directly engage in fabrication activities with the product without a certification. By expanding the scope of the crime of perjury, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would require a person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities to verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity. The bill would specify that a violation of the above-described restrictions on supplying a slab solid surface product may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division, as specified, but is not a crime.
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48+The bill would specify that a violation of any of the above-described provisions may be grounds for disciplinary action, as specified, but is not a crime. The
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50+
4451
4552 The bill would establish the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund in the State Treasury, and require all fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under the above-described provisions to be deposited into the account. The bill would authorize moneys in the account to be expended by the department for the purposes of administering the above-described provisions, and would make that authorization contingent on an appropriation of funds for that express purpose.
4653
47-The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of the bills provisions and a publicly accessible database that includes, among other things, information on includes information on, among other things, any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.
54+The bill would require, beginning January 1, 2027, the State Public Health Officer Director of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes, among other things, information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop, as specified.
4855
4956 The bill would define various terms for these purposes. The bill would make findings and declarations related to these provisions.
5057
5158 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
5259
5360 This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
5461
5562 ## Digest Key
5663
5764 ## Bill Text
5865
59-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 258 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 15 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 30 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the Department of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D)Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i)The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii)The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I)The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II)The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii)The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv)The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division. (C)(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D)(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:(a)Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b)Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.(c)An(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
66+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the State Department of Public Health Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:(a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
6067
6168 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6269
6370 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
6471
65-SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 258 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 15 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 30 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the Department of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.
72+SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the State Department of Public Health Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.
6673
67-SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 258 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 15 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 30 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the Department of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.
74+SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:(1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.(3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.(4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.(5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.(b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California: (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 workers have received lung transplants.(c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:(1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.(2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.(3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.(d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:(1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.(2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.(e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:(1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.(2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?(f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.(g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:(1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust. (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.(3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.(4) Requiring the State Department of Public Health Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.
6875
6976 SECTION 1. (a) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding silicosis and its associated health impacts:
7077
7178 ### SECTION 1.
7279
7380 (1) According to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), silicosis is an occupational lung disease caused by the inhalation of respirable dust containing crystalline silica.
7481
7582 (2) According to the State Department of Public Health, crystalline silica is in engineered stone, quartz, granite, and other stones. Cutting, grinding, chipping, sanding, drilling, and polishing these products can release hazardous levels of small silica particles into the air that workers breathe.
7683
7784 (3) When small particles of silica get into the lungs, they can cause permanent scarring and difficulty breathing and can also cause lung cancer, kidney damage, and several autoimmune diseases. Initial symptoms of silicosis can include shortness of breath, cough, and fatigue. Workers can die from silica dust overexposure.
7885
7986 (4) Many cases of incurable and fatal lung problems from exposure to silica dust in stone fabrication workers have been reported around the world and in the United States, including several cases among relatively young workers in California. Workers who cut, grind, and polish engineered stone slabs are at risk.
8087
8188 (5) According to the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, silicosis is irreversible and can progress even if a person is no longer exposed to silica dust, but with the right measures in place, it is preventable. It can take a person 10 to 30 years to develop silicosis, but a person who is exposed to high levels of silica dust can develop silicosis faster.
8289
8390 (b) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the increase in the number of cases of silicosis in California:
8491
8592 (1) Since 2010, more than 1,000 cases of silicosis in workers who fabricate countertops and other stone have been reported worldwide. The first cases of silicosis were reported in Spain in 2010 and in Israel in 2012. The first case of silicosis reported in the United States was in Texas in 2015.
8693
87-(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 258 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 15 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 30 workers have received lung transplants.
94+(2) According to the State Department of Public Health, there are 132 workers who fabricate, install, or fabricate and install countertops and other stone products identified to date with silicosis in California. At least 10 workers have died, most of whom were 30 to 40 years of age, inclusive, and at least 12 workers have received lung transplants.
8895
8996 (c) The Legislature finds and declares all of the following regarding the increased use of silica in products:
9097
9198 (1) Crystalline silica is a common mineral found in the earths crust. Materials like sand, stone, concrete, and mortar contain crystalline silica. Stone slabs containing crystalline silica such as quartz are becoming increasingly popular for kitchen countertops and for use on a variety of surfaces.
9299
93100 (2) Workers who cut, polish, or grind products that contain crystalline silica can be exposed to hazardous levels of silica dust.
94101
95102 (3) In 1938, United States Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins declared that silicosis can be prevented.
96103
97104 (d) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis on undocumented workers:
98105
99106 (1) The demographic for workers contracting silicosis are typically young, immigrant workers, are all males with a median age of 45 years of age at diagnosis, with 98 percent originating from Mexico or Central America, and are mostly reliant on public insurance or uninsured.
100107
101108 (2) Physicians at Olive View-UCLA Medical Center in the County of Los Angeles identified a cluster of patients with a rare occupational lung disease called pulmonary silicosis and played a key role in bringing their cases to light. The patients identified are predominantly Mexican and Latin American immigrant men who work as stonecutters in the San Fernando Valley, cutting synthetic stone kitchen and bathroom countertops. According to a State Department of Public Health directory, there are over 100 stone fabrication shops in the centers catchment area in the San Fernando Valley and over 1,000 within the state, and many other at-risk workers in the County of Los Angeles and throughout the state.
102109
103110 (e) The Legislature finds and declares both of the following regarding the impact of silicosis worldwide:
104111
105112 (1) The New Zealand Council of Trade Unions (NZCTU) Te Kauae Kaimahi advanced a call for a total ban on engineered stone in New Zealand. According to the NZCTU President, Richard Wagstaff, the evidence of the harm caused by engineered stone is overwhelming. It is clear to us that a ban on this product is the only option.
106113
107114 (2) On July 1, 2024, Australia became the first country to institute a ban on engineered stone and follows a surge in hundreds of workers developing silicosis from working on engineered stone, a popular material mostly used for kitchen benches and bathroom vanities. When the ban was announced, the Australian Council of Trade Unions Assistant Secretary, Liam OBrien, said, Engineered stone is a fashion product that is killing the workers who make it. With alternatives readily available, why are we risking the lives of tradies for a fashionable finish in our kitchens?
108115
109116 (f) The Legislature finds and declares that California must use the information described in these findings to determine the cost-benefit ratio to workers and whether existing regulations adequately protect workers from contracting silicosis.
110117
111118 (g) Therefore, it is the intent of the Legislature to enact legislation that would help protect and prevent worker overexposure to respirable crystalline silica by imposing all of the following requirements:
112119
113120 (1) Prohibiting the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.
114121
115122 (2) Requiring a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification for fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities involving a stone slab solid surface product that contains crystalline silica.
116123
117124 (3) Prohibiting a person or entity from directly or indirectly supplying a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities that is not associated with a valid slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification.
118125
119-(4) Requiring the Department of Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.
126+(4) Requiring the State Department of Public Health Industrial Relations to maintain a publicly accessible database on its internet website that includes, but is not limited to, a list of fabrication shops and workplaces with any enforcement actions pending at those workplaces.
120127
121-SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D)Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i)The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii)The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I)The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II)The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii)The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv)The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division. (C)(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D)(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:(a)Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b)Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.(c)An(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
128+SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read: CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:(a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
122129
123130 SEC. 2. Chapter 2.2 (commencing with Section 6359.1) is added to Part 1 of Division 5 of the Labor Code, to read:
124131
125132 ### SEC. 2.
126133
127- CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D)Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i)The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii)The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I)The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II)The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii)The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv)The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division. (C)(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D)(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:(a)Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b)Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.(c)An(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
134+ CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:(a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
128135
129- CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D)Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i)The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii)The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I)The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II)The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii)The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv)The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division. (C)(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D)(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:(a)Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b)Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.(c)An(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
136+ CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:(a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
130137
131138 CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products
132139
133140 CHAPTER 2.2. Fabrication Activities on Stone Slab Products
134141
135-6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.
142+6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.(d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.(e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.(f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:(1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.(2) Submersing the work object under water.(3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.(g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.(2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.(h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.(2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.(i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.(j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.(2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.
136143
137144
138145
139146 6359.1. For purposes of this chapter, the following definitions apply:
140147
141148 (a) Certification means a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to engage in fabrication activities that is issued to a fabrication shop by the department pursuant to this chapter.
142149
143-(b) Department means the Department of Industrial Relations.
150+(b) Department means the State Department of Public Health. Industrial Relations.
144151
145-(c) Director means the Director of Industrial Relations.
152+(c) Director means the State Public Health Officer. Director of Industrial Relations.
146153
147154 (d) Division means the Division of Occupational Safety & Health.
148155
149156 (e) Dry methods means the undertaking of fabrication activities without the use of effective wet methods that effectively suppress dust.
150157
151158 (f) Effective wet methods means suppressing dust by one of the methods identified below, which ensure that water covers the entire surface of the work object where a tool, equipment, or machine contacts the work object:
152159
153160 (1) Applying a constant, continuous, and appropriate volume of running water directly onto the surface of the work object. When water flow is integrated with a tool, machine, or equipment, water flow rates shall equal or exceed manufacturer recommendations and specifications to ensure effective dust suppression.
154161
155162 (2) Submersing the work object under water.
156163
157164 (3) Water-jet cutting or using high-pressure water to cut material.
158165
159166 (g) (1) Fabrication activities means machining, crushing, cutting, drilling, abrading, abrasive blasting, grinding, chiseling, carving, gouging, polishing, buffing, fracturing, intentional breaking, or intentional chipping of slab solid surface products.
160167
161168 (2) Fabrication activities does not include onsite construction work covered by Section 1532.3 of Title 8 of the California Code of Regulations.
162169
163170 (h) (1) Fabrication shop means a location where fabrication activities are undertaken.
164171
165172 (2) Fabrication shop does not include facilities where slab solid surface products are manufactured, including, but not limited to, quarries, concrete manufacturing facilities, or tile manufacturing facilities.
166173
167174 (i) Respirable crystalline silica means quartz, cristobalite, or tridymite contained in airborne particles that are determined to be respirable by a sampling device designed to meet the characteristics for respirable-particle-size-selective samplers specified in the Air Quality Particle Size Fraction Definitions for Health-Related Sampling in Report 7708 completed by the International Organization for Standardization in 1995.
168175
169176 (j) (1) Slab solid surface product means a hard stone-like substance, including, but not limited to, artificial, engineered, or natural stone, including granite or marble, that is used for countertop installation or customization.
170177
171178 (2) For purposes of paragraph (1), artificial stone means any reconstituted, artificial, synthetic, composite, engineered, or manufactured stone. It is commonly made by binding crushed or pulverized stone, quartz, porcelain, or other crystalline silica-containing materials with adhesives, polymers, epoxies, resins, or other binding materials to form a slab.
172179
173180 6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.(b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.(c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.
174181
175182
176183
177184 6359.15. (a) The Slab Fabrication Activity Account is hereby created in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund, as established pursuant to Section 62.5, in the State Treasury.
178185
179186 (b) All fees, penalties, or other moneys collected by the department under this chapter shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account.
180187
181188 (c) Upon appropriation by the Legislature for this express purpose, moneys in the account may be expended by the department for the purposes of administering this chapter.
182189
183190 6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.(b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.(c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.
184191
185192
186193
187194 6359.2. (a) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall not use dry methods in any fabrication activities.
188195
189196 (b) A person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall use effective wet methods in any fabrication activities.
190197
191198 (c) (1) A violation of this section shall be grounds for an immediate order prohibiting continued fabrication activities by the division and may be grounds for additional fines and penalties, as determined by the division or the director to further the purposes of this chapter.
192199
193200 (2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.
194201
195202 (d) A violation of this section may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.
196203
197-6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.
204+6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.(1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:(A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.(B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.(b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.(1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.(2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.(3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.
198205
199206
200207
201208 6359.3. (a) On or before July 1, 2026, the department shall consult with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs to adopt a training curriculum regarding the safe performance of fabrication activities.
202209
203210 (1) The training curriculum shall satisfy both of the following requirements:
204211
205212 (A) The training curriculum shall cover applicable occupational safety and health standards.
206213
207214 (B) The training curriculum shall include classroom instruction and supervised hands-on activities.
208215
209-(2) An approved apprenticeship program approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.
216+(2) An approved apprenticeship program may provide the training curriculum. The department shall approve alternative providers if approved apprenticeship programs do not offer training programs sufficient to meet the needs of the industry.
210217
211-(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the The department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer with representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, programs approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.
218+(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this subdivision that the Department of Industrial Relations department shall enact regulations or update existing regulations related to this chapter to further develop the training program described in paragraph (1) and shall consult and confer representatives of approved apprenticeship programs, applicable trade associations, and affected slab solid surface product producers, manufacturers, and fabricators during the regulatory process.
212219
213220 (b) Beginning on July 1, 2027, an owner or operator of a fabrication shop, any individual that will employ another individual to perform work on the shop floor of a fabrication shop, and any individual that will perform fabrication activities shall be enrolled in or have completed the training curriculum described in this section before that fabrication activity or employment begins.
214221
215222 (1) The owner or operator of a fabrication shop shall be responsible for paying for the costs of the training curriculum of its employees.
216223
217224 (2) The department shall certify an individual who has completed the approved training curriculum immediately upon completion.
218225
219226 (3) This subdivision shall not apply to an individual who is enrolled in, or who has graduated from, an apprenticeship program that covers fabrication activities and is approved by the Division of Apprenticeship Standards.
220227
221-6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D)Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i)The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii)The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I)The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II)The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii)The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv)The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division. (C)(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D)(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.
228+6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:(A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.(B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.(C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.(ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.(D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:(i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.(ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:(I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.(iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.(2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.(B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.(C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.(2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.(5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:(i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.(iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.(iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.(B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.(C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.(D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.(6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.(ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.(iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.(8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.(B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.(C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.(c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.
222229
223230
224231
225232 6359.4. (a) (1) On or before January 1, 2027, the department shall do all of the following:
226233
227234 (A) Develop an application and certification process for a slab solid surface product fabrication activity certification to authorize fabrication shops to engage in fabrication activities.
228235
229236 (B) Develop an initial deposit process for fabrication shops to, during the pendency of the application development and certification process, submit a deposit fee for the application and initial certification subject to all of the following requirements:
230237
231238 (i) The deposit fee amount shall be in an amount as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.
232239
233240 (ii) The deposit fee amount collected by the department shall be used towards the initial certification fee collected pursuant to subdivision (b), and the applicable amount shall be returned to a fabrication shop if the deposit amount exceeds the initial certification fee or if the application is denied.
234241
235242 (C) (i) Determine the initial certification fee and the renewal fee to be collected pursuant to subdivision (b), which shall be in amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.
236243
237244 (ii) The department, in determining the fee amounts described in clause (i), may establish different fees for large or small fabrication shops in the state as the department deems necessary for regulatory purposes. The department shall, in determining the sizes of the fabrication shops and the fee amounts, consult with relevant stakeholders, including owners and operators of fabrication shops.
238245
239246 (D) Create a statewide tracking system to track the number of and progress of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process subject to all of the following requirements:
240247
241-
242-
243248 (i) The statewide tracking system shall be posted on the departments internet website and be made available to the public.
244-
245-
246249
247250 (ii) The statewide tracking system shall include, but not be limited to, both of the following information:
248251
249-
250-
251252 (I) The names and total number of the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.
252-
253-
254253
255254 (II) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.
256255
257-
258-
259256 (iii) The statewide tracking system shall not include any identifiable personal information.
260-
261-
262257
263258 (iv) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update the information described in clause (ii) to the statewide tracking system when new information becomes available.
264259
265-
266-
267260 (2) (A) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the application development and certification process.
268261
269-(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January July 1, 2027.
262+(B) This paragraph shall become inoperative on January 1, 2027.
270263
271-(b) (1) Commencing January July 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:
264+(b) (1) Commencing January 1, 2027, the department shall accept an application for and grant a certification to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the departments satisfaction of all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:
272265
273266 (A) Evidence of a legally obtained and valid business license and applicable state contractors license.
274267
275268 (B) Evidence of satisfactory workers compensation insurance coverage.
276269
277270 (C) Documentation of completion by applicable individuals of the training curriculum required by Section 6359.3 within one year of enrollment.
278271
279272 (2) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of the certification to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.
280273
281-(3) (A) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.
282-
283-(B) Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter to the contrary, a fabrication shop may continue to engage in fabrication activities if it has submitted an initial certification application and the application fee pursuant to subparagraph (A) while it awaits inspection pursuant to paragraph (2) during the pendency of the certification application.
274+(3) An applicant for a certification shall submit to the department an initial certification application, including an application fee and an initial certification fee in the amounts determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.
284275
285276 (4) Each certification granted by the department shall be for a three-year period.
286277
287278 (5) (A) The department shall accept a renewal application for and grant a certification renewal to a fabrication shop that demonstrates to the department continued compliance with all of the following workplace safety conditions and precautions:
288279
289280 (i) Evidence of compliance with the requirements of any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.
290281
291282 (ii) Documentation of certified air quality monitoring results consistent with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3 over the prior three years.
292283
293284 (iii) Documentation of information related to employee-reported silicosis cases.
294285
295286 (iv) Beginning July 1, 2027, documentation that all individuals who perform fabrication activities or perform work on a shop floor of a fabrication shop have been certified, or are exempt from certification, pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 6359.3.
296287
297288 (B) The department, or a third party certified by the department for this purpose, shall inspect a fabrication shop before the issuance of a certification renewal to verify that the equipment and procedures of the fabrication shop are in compliance with any occupational safety and health standards and orders that are promulgated by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board pursuant to Section 142.3.
298289
299290 (C) An applicant for a certification renewal shall submit to the department a certification renewal fee in the amount determined by the department, which shall be deposited in the Slab Fabrication Activity Account in the Occupational Safety and Health Fund for the purposes of administering this chapter.
300291
301292 (D) A fabrication shop with a previous certification may continue to engage in fabrication activities during the pendency of the certification renewal application.
302293
303294 (6) The department may suspend or revoke a certificate issued pursuant to this section if the department finds that the fabrication shop has engaged in gross negligence, gross incompetence, or willful or repeated disregard of any emergency or other occupational safety and health standards, occupational safety and health standards orders, any provision of this chapter, or any other related provision of law.
304295
305-(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, division and the State Department of Public Health, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:
296+(7) (A) The department, in consultation with the division, shall track and keep a record of information on fabrication shops regarding all of the following:
306297
307-(i) The number of citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those citations.
298+(i) The number of violations citations issued to any of the fabrication shops for failure to comply with any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board, and the geographic areas in the state with the highest numbers of those violations. citations.
308299
309300 (ii) The number of new cases of silicosis identified in any of the fabrication shops since the passage of any temporary or future standards relating to respirable crystalline silica adopted by the Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board.
310301
311302 (iii) The number of notices issued to fabrication shops found to be in noncompliance with department regulations relating to respirable crystalline silica.
312303
313-(B)The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the division.
304+(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to the Department of Industrial Relations. division.
314305
306+(C) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.
315307
316-
317-(C)
318-
319-
320-
321-(B) The department shall provide the information described in subparagraph (A) to, or otherwise assist as applicable, local prosecutors in seeking civil or criminal action against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.
322-
323-(D)
324-
325-
326-
327-(C) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.
308+(D) The division may use the information described in subparagraph (A) in seeking enforcement against fabrication shops in violation of any applicable provisions.
328309
329310 (8) (A) A person or entity, or an employee of a person or entity, shall not engage in fabrication activities without a certificate issued by the department pursuant to this chapter.
330311
331312 (B) A violation of this paragraph may be reported to the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement.
332313
333314 (C) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this paragraph is not a crime.
334315
335316 (c) Commencing January 1, 2028, the department shall evaluate the cost of implementation of this chapter and may adjust the amounts of the initial certification fee and the renewal certification fee, which shall be in reasonable amounts as the department deems necessary to implement this chapter and shall not exceed the reasonable regulatory cost.
336317
337-6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.
318+6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.(1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.(2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.(b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.(2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.
338319
339320
340321
341322 6359.5. (a) A person shall not supply a slab solid surface product directly to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities if the person or entity engaged in fabrication activities does not have a valid certification.
342323
343324 (1) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity engaged in fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before providing the slab solid surface product to the person or entity.
344325
345326 (2) A person that supplies a slab solid surface product to a person or entity that is not engaged in fabrication activities shall rely on a written certification issued under penalty of perjury from the person that the person will not directly engage in fabrication activities on the product without a certificate and that, if the person resells the product, the person will resell to a person or entity with a certification.
346327
347328 (b) A person that seeks services that require fabrication activities and enters into a contract with a person or entity to undertake fabrication activities shall verify that the person or entity has a valid certificate before engaging with and providing slab solid surface products to that person or entity.
348329
349-(c) (1) A violation of this section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.
330+(c) (1) A violation of this subdivision section may be grounds for penalties as determined by the division to further the purposes of this chapter.
350331
351332 (2) Notwithstanding any provision of this division to the contrary, a violation of this section is not a crime.
352333
353-(d) This section shall become operative on January July 1, 2027.
334+(d) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2027.
354335
355-6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:(a)Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b)Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.(c)An(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
336+6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:(a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.(b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
356337
357338
358339
359-6359.6. (a) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following: includes, but is not limited to, information on all of the following:
340+6359.6. Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain a publicly accessible database on the departments internet website that includes all of the following:
360341
361342 (a) Information on any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.
362343
363-
364-
365344 (b) Information on fabrication shops in the state certified pursuant to this chapter and on any pending enforcement actions against those certified fabrication shops.
366345
367-
368-
369-(1) The names and total number of fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for an application for certification.
370-
371-(2) The status of the certification process for the fabrication shops that have submitted a deposit for the application and certification process.
372-
373-(3) Any pending enforcement actions against certified fabrication shops.
374-
375-(4) Any active orders issued by the department in the prior 12 months prohibiting an activity at a fabrication shop pursuant to this chapter.
376-
377-(b) The database shall not include any personally identifiable information.
378-
379-(c) The department shall, to the extent feasible, update and upload the information described in subdivision (a) to the public database when new information becomes available.
380-
381-(c)An
382-
383-
384-
385-(d) Beginning January 1, 2027, the director shall maintain on the departments internet website an online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
346+(c) An online tool to report suspected or alleged violations of this chapter.
386347
387348 SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
388349
389350 SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
390351
391352 SEC. 3. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
392353
393354 ### SEC. 3.