Oregon Employers Urged to Protect Workers by Avoiding Outdoor Work

Oregon workplace and public health officials are urging employers to stop or delay outdoor work activity where they can and take other reasonable steps to protect workers when air quality reaches the “unhealthy” zone, or worse.

Employers are responsible for providing safe and healthy workplaces, and recognizing and addressing hazards to workers—including unsafe air quality that is expected to continue through the weekend, according to officials at Oregon Occupational Safety and Health (Oregon OSHA) and Oregon Health Authority.

That responsibility includes:

“During this incredibly challenging and evolving emergency, we are encouraging employers—particularly those with outdoor operations—to take all reasonable and necessary precautions and steps to ensure the safety of their employees,” said Michael Wood, administrator for Oregon OSHA.

Such outdoor operations include farming harvests, construction and those in which outdoor activities require heavy and prolonged exertion. This is because exertion results in a higher respiratory rate that will increase harmful pollutant exposure and increase the risk of adverse health effects. Moreover, current conditions combine pollution from wildfire smoke with increased ambient temperatures in some areas. Heat and air pollution both affect lung and heart health and could have additive adverse effects on workers, according to OSHA.

And while the COVID-19 pandemic has caused many outdoor workers to more routinely use face coverings to protect themselves and others from the virus, face masks, face shields and face coverings are not acceptable replacements for improved air quality, according to the OHA Public Health Division.

Employers also are encouraged to check the state’s Air Quality Index Map and air quality ratings at the beginning of a shift and every hour into the shift to ensure workers are not working in “unhealthy” or worse conditions.

Indoor air quality may also become a concern. Employers and workers are encouraged to check a building’s ventilation system to make sure it has received routine maintenance, such as filter changes.

Oregon OSHA also offers other resources to help employers and workers assess and address hazards, including air quality issues: