An analysis of OSHA whistleblower cases by law professor Emily Speiler of Northeastern Universty School of Law in Boston has found that workers settling whistleblower protection cases with OSHA are only reinstated 11% of the time. Spieler asserts that this limited protection discourages workers from reporting on-the-job risks.
A total of 12,502 Section 11(c) complaints were filed from 2011 to 2013, and of those, only 41% were allowed to pass the initial screening. A large portion of the rejected cases, 905, were rejected because they were filed after the 30-day deadline.
Of the cases that were actually investigated, 52% were dismissed,19% were withdrawn by the worker, and 27% were settled. The average settlement was $7,353 in 2012 and $8,700 in 2013.
Spieler contends that the current law does not go far enough to protect workers. There have been several attempts to update the OSH Act to extend the complaint deadline to 180 days, increase the damages that could be sought, allow OSHA to require the temporary reinstatement of a worker in some circumstances and permit workers and private attorneys to file lawsuits in federal court. The latest attempt, the Protecting America's Workers Act (S. 665) sponsored by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) in 2013, failed to move out of the HELP Committee.