“That buzzing noise over a construction site could be an OSHA drone searching for safety violations,” Bloomberg Law reports, linking to a May 18, 2018 DOL memorandum
obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request. Yes, your
friendly neighborhood OSHA inspector is now authorized by the Labor
Department “to use camera-carrying drones as part of their inspections
of outdoor workplaces.”
This may not be news to expert OSHA
attorneys, but it was a shock to me. How could this happen during a
Republican Administration? Do OSHA inspectors think they are DEA
agents?
Yes, the OSHA memo requires inspectors
to “obtain express consent from the employer” prior to using a drone,
thus likely avoiding the Fourth Amendment problem. But anyone who
practices before the DOL understands this: Employers who refuse such
consent – who exercise their Fourth Amendment right and require DOL to
obtain a search warrant – risk the ire of the DOL, with serious
consequences. Nothing is more likely to put a target on an employer’s
back for multiple and frequent future investigations than sending a DOL
investigator away from your doors. Refusing consent will label you at
the DOL as a bad faith employer that deserves closer scrutiny. This I
know through experience practicing before DOL and as a former
Administrator of DOL’s Wage & Hour Division.
Thus, I always advise employers to
cooperate with DOL investigators in providing requested documents and
allowing on-site visits. But in the case of OSHA drones, I have to
agree with the attorneys who told Bloomberg Law, “that employers should
be wary of giving OSHA inspectors blanket permission to fly
remote-controlled aircraft above worksites.”
Video recorded by a drone will show much
more than potential safety violations. The drones could record trade
secrets or employees doing things they shouldn’t. But, the memo
contains not a single word on protecting the privacy of employers or
employees caught on video. How long will OSHA retain the video? Who
will have access to the video? Will the videos be obtainable by
competitors or unions through a FOIA requests? Will employees be
allowed to deny their consent to be videoed? Will employers be allowed
to view the video and discipline employees based on what they see? The
unanswered questions seem endless.
Secretary Acosta should withdraw this
stealth memo allowing drone surveillance by OSHA inspectors. The
regulated community should be allowed to express its views on such a
radical change in OSHA investigations; DOL has many questions to answer
before sending drones over our workplaces.