Corrective Action Plans After an OSHA Citation: What to Do in the First 72 Hours

Receiving an OSHA citation can disrupt operations and create immediate uncertainty for employers. The first 72 hours are critical because the decisions you make during that period can affect penalties, abatement timelines, and future compliance risks.

A strong corrective action plan helps organize your response, document hazard correction, and reduce the likelihood of repeat violations. Whether you are responding to federal OSHA or Cal/OSHA citations, a structured plan can help protect your employees and strengthen your compliance program.

In this guide, we explain how to build corrective action plans, what documentation OSHA expects, and how to manage your OSHA citation response effectively.

Corrective action plans for OSHA citation response

Why Corrective Action Plans Matter After an OSHA Citation

When OSHA issues a citation, employers generally have 15 working days to respond. During that time, you may:

  • Correct hazards
  • Request an informal conference
  • File a notice of contest

A corrective action plan creates a roadmap for each of these steps.

Without a structured plan, businesses often miss deadlines, submit incomplete documentation, or fail to address root causes. These mistakes can increase penalties or result in additional violations.

A corrective action plan should focus on:

  • Immediate hazard correction
  • Root cause analysis
  • Documentation of abatement
  • Employee retraining
  • Long-term prevention measures

Step 1: Control Immediate Hazards

Your first priority is worker protection.

Before discussing strategy, remove or reduce any immediate hazard.

Immediate hazard controls may include:

  • Lockout or tagout of unsafe equipment
  • Temporary barricades or guards
  • Temporary work process changes
  • Emergency employee retraining

Document every immediate action.

This documentation may include:

  • Photos
  • Maintenance records
  • Supervisor notes
  • Employee communications

OSHA considers early abatement a positive factor during penalty discussions.

For hazard correction requirements,

Step 2: Create Your Corrective Action Plan

This is where your formal corrective action plan begins.

A complete corrective action plan should include:

1. Citation Item Identification

List every OSHA citation item separately.

Example:

  • Citation #1: Fall protection deficiency
  • Citation #2: Incomplete hazard communication program

2. Root Cause Analysis

Identify why the violation happened.

Common causes include:

  • Missing training
  • Lack of supervision
  • Equipment failure
  • Incomplete written programs

3. Corrective Measures

Document exactly how the issue will be fixed.

Examples:

  • Install guardrails
  • Update lockout procedures
  • Replace damaged equipment
  • Conduct retraining

4. Responsible Parties

Assign ownership.

Each corrective action needs a clear responsible person.

5. Completion Dates

Set realistic deadlines.

Missing abatement deadlines can lead to additional penalties.

OSHA corrective action plan checklist

Step 3: Organize Supporting Documentation

Strong documentation supports your OSHA citation response.

Gather:

  • OSHA citation packet
  • Inspection notes
  • Photos from inspection
  • Written safety programs
  • SDS documentation
  • Training records
  • Maintenance logs
  • Incident reports

Store everything in one centralized file.

This simplifies communication during informal conferences or legal review.

If you need support organizing documentation, PCS Safety offers OSHA citation defense services and mitigation support.

Step 4: Build Proof of Abatement

OSHA requires employers to submit abatement verification.

Your corrective action plan should include proof such as:

  • Before-and-after photos
  • Updated written policies
  • Repair invoices
  • Employee sign-in sheets
  • New inspection logs

Abatement documentation proves:

  • The hazard was corrected
  • Employees were informed
  • Controls are now in place

For larger corrections requiring more than 90 days, OSHA may require progress reports.

This is especially important for construction and manufacturing employers managing larger compliance projects.

Learn more

Step 5: Prepare for the Informal Conference

An informal conference gives employers an opportunity to discuss citations before contesting.

Your corrective action plan can strengthen this discussion.

Bring:

  • Completed abatement evidence
  • Timeline of corrective actions
  • Updated written procedures
  • Training records
  • Photos of corrections

During the meeting, employers may negotiate:

  • Reduced penalties
  • Grouped violations
  • Extended abatement deadlines

PCS Safety helps employers prepare documentation and strategy through its OSHA mitigation process.

Step 6: Prevent Failure-to-Abate Penalties

Failure-to-abate penalties can accumulate daily if corrective actions are not completed and documented on time.

A well-structured corrective action plan helps track progress, assign accountability, and prevent missed deadlines.

Use a simple corrective action log to monitor each citation item:

Citation Item: Fall hazard
Corrective Action: Install guardrails
Assigned To: Safety Manager
Deadline: 10 days
Status: Open

Citation Item: Training issue
Corrective Action: Conduct retraining
Assigned To: HR Department
Deadline: 5 days
Status: Complete

This type of tracking system helps maintain accountability and ensures each corrective action is completed within OSHA’s required timeframe.

A Mock OSHA Inspection can also help verify that all corrections have been fully implemented and that field conditions match your documentation.

Step 7: Prevent Repeat Violations

Corrective action plans are not just about fixing hazards. They help prevent repeat citations.

After resolution:

Update Written Safety Programs

Revise policies to reflect corrected procedures.

Retrain Employees

Conduct focused retraining on cited hazards.

Reinspect Affected Areas

Verify long-term compliance.

Schedule Ongoing Safety Audits

Quarterly audits can help identify issues before OSHA does.

Repeat violations often result in significantly higher penalties, making prevention essential.

For penalty details.

Corrective Action Plans for Cal/OSHA Citations

California employers face additional requirements under Cal/OSHA.

Corrective action plans for Cal/OSHA citations should include:

  • Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) updates
  • Site-specific hazard assessments
  • Additional employee training documentation
  • Written hazard correction verification

California employers should act quickly because Cal/OSHA may require stricter documentation than federal OSHA.

How PCS Safety Supports OSHA Citation Response

PCS Safety helps businesses create corrective action plans and manage OSHA citation response from start to finish.

Our support includes:

  • Citation review and analysis
  • Abatement documentation support
  • Informal conference preparation
  • Mock OSHA inspections
  • Long-term compliance planning

We work with construction, manufacturing, and industrial employers across California to reduce compliance risk and improve workplace safety.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a corrective action plan for OSHA?

A corrective action plan is a structured document outlining how an employer will fix cited hazards, prevent recurrence, and document compliance.

They can help support penalty reduction discussions by showing good faith and immediate hazard correction.

Most employers have 15 working days from receipt of the citation.

While terminology may vary, California employers must document hazard correction and preventive actions as part of compliance.

Take Action Before Deadlines Pass

An OSHA citation does not have to lead to maximum penalties or repeat violations. A well-documented corrective action plan helps you manage the immediate response, demonstrate good faith, and improve your long-term safety program.

If you need help organizing your OSHA citation response or preparing abatement documentation, PCS Safety can help.