- Hourly / - BiWeekly /
- Monthly / $69,323.00-$112,044.00 Yearly
An Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist III is the full performance level of work at the Maryland Department of Labor involving the inspection, research, and analysis of the effect of chemical or physical workplace hazards on worker health. Employees in this classification help to control or eliminate workplace hazards through compliance and enforcement measures designed to provide corrective action for violators of the Maryland Occupational Safety and Health Law. Employees in this classification do not supervise other positions.
Employees in this classification receive general supervision from an Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist Supervisor or other designated supervisor. Employees in this class may be required to work evenings and weekends. The work requires travel to work sites where working conditions may be noisy, dirty or uncomfortable. The work may require lifting and carrying specialized instruments and the use of protective clothing and equipment.
Positions in this classification are evaluated by using the classification job evaluation methodology. The use of this method involves comparing the assigned duties and responsibilities of a position to the job criteria found in the Nature of Work and Examples of Work sections of the class specification.
The Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist I, Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist II, and Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist III levels are differentiated on the basis of degree of supervisory control exercised by the supervisor over these employees. The Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist I learns to perform duties under close supervision. The Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist II performs duties under close supervision at times and with complete independence at other times depending on the complexity of the specific duty being performed. The Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist III performs the full range of duties and responsibilities under general supervision. The Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist III differs from the Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist Lead/Advanced in that Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist Lead/Advanced assigns, reviews and approves the work of and trains lower-level Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienists and may assign, review and approve the work of and train OSH Compliance Officers while the Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienist Advanced or serves as a key technical and subject matter expert in the identification, evaluation and determination of control methods for unique or new occupational health hazards.
Inspects, researches and analyzes chemical and physical workplace hazards in order to control or eliminate hazards affecting employee health and to enforce federal and State occupational safety and health laws, regulations and standards which address general employee health, ventilation, fire and explosion, noise, air contaminants, respirators and the ingestion and absorption of hazards;
Conducts research using reference books and publications in the field of industrial hygiene in order to identify potential hazards, establish the existence of natural hazards and identify feasible methods of correction;
Prepares, evaluates, classifies and issues citations for employer non-compliance with federal and State occupational safety and health laws, regulations and standards involving distance specifications, construction safety and health requirements, process safety management, record keeping requirements, testing, instruction and training requirements;
Inspects work places in order to identify health hazards which may result from operations involving toxic substances, noise, heat, radiation, vibration and other physical and chemical factors;
Measures health hazards using specialized sampling and testing equipment;
Meets with employers or labor officials before and after inspections to discuss matters such as the purpose and methods of the inspections, the results of the inspections, the applicable safety and health standards, areas of noncompliance and possible remedial actions;
Prepares reports which describe inspection findings, research and analysis conclusions and applicable regulatory citations and penalties;
Recommends solutions designed to eliminate occupational safety and health hazards;
Calibrates and maintains sampling equipment such as air sampling pumps, noise monitoring instruments, air velocity and flow meters and similar technical equipment;
Testifies at administrative hearings and court proceedings;
May monitor employees through an entire shift in order to measure workplace exposure to hazards;
May conduct conferences with employers who have received citations and fines to attempt to resolve disputes and disagreements and may recommend modification of violation citations and amounts of fines;
May provide technical assistance, guidance and training to lower-level Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Hygienists and/or Occupational Safety and Health Compliance Officers.
May provide training in the recognition of health hazards and in safety precautions for management and employees of private businesses or public agencies and may learn to determine if private sector training programs are in compliance with federal and State occupational safety and health laws, regulations and standards;
Performs other related duties.
Knowledge of the basic principles of organic chemistry, biology, physics and mathematics;
Knowledge of federal and State health and safety laws, regulations and standards and voluntary consensus standards relating to occupational safety and health and indoor air quality;
Skill in the recognition, identification and analysis of actual and potential chemical and physical workplace hazards that affect employee health;
Skill in the preparation of technical reports and analyses;
Skill in using specialized equipment to obtain exposure samples;
Skill in the application of basic statistical techniques in the analysis of primary data;
Skill in the interpretation of technical and legal standards covering workplace hazards;
Ability to interpret the results of laboratory tests on exposure samples;
Ability to draw conclusions based on inspections, sampling data and test results;
Ability to communicate complex and technical concepts effectively;
Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships with employers, employees, local, State and federal government personnel.
Experience: Six years of experience inspecting, researching and analyzing chemical and physical workplace hazards affecting employee health in order to control or eliminate hazards and to ensure compliance with federal and State occupational safety and health laws, regulations and standards.
Notes:
1. Candidates may substitute the possession of a Bachelor's degree from an accredited college or university in industrial hygiene, physical science or life science which includes 12 credit hours in chemistry and 18 additional credit hours in any combination of the following: chemistry, physics, engineering, health physics, environmental health, biostatistics, biology, physiology, toxicology, epidemiology or industrial hygiene and two years of experience inspecting, researching and analyzing chemical and physical workplace hazards affecting employee health in order to control or eliminate hazards and to ensure compliance with federal and State occupational safety and health laws, regulations and standards for the required experience.
2. Candidates may substitute the possession of a Master’s degree in industrial hygiene from an accredited college or university for five years of the required experience.
3. Candidates may substitute U.S. Armed Forces military service experience as a commissioned officer in General Inspection, Investigation, Enforcement and Compliance classifications or General Inspection, Investigation, Enforcement and Compliance specialty codes in the Inspection, Investigation, Enforcement, and Compliance field of work on a year-for-year basis for the required experience.
Class specifications are broad descriptions covering groups of positions used by various State departments and agencies. Position descriptions maintained by the using department or agency specifically address the essential job functions of each position.
This is a Skilled Service classification in the State Personnel Management System. All positions in this classification are Skilled Service positions. Some positions in Skilled Service classifications may be designated Appointment in accordance with the State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 6-405, Annotated Code of Maryland.
This classification is assigned to Bargaining Unit G- Engineering, Scientific and Administrative Professionals classes. As provided by State Personnel and Pensions Article, Section 3-102, special appointment, temporary, contractual, supervisory, managerial, and confidential employees are excluded from collective bargaining. Additionally, certain executive branch agencies are exempt from collective bargaining and all positions in those agencies are excluded from collective bargaining.
This classification is one level in a Non-Competitive Promotion (NCP) series. NCP promotions are promotions by which employees may advance in grade and class level from trainee to full performance level in a classification series. In order to be non-competitively promoted to the next level in a NCP series, an employee must: 1) perform the main purpose of the class, as defined by the Nature of Work section of the class specification; 2) receive the type of supervision defined in the class specification and 3) meet the minimum qualifications of the classification.