Title 40 › Subtitle SUBTITLE II— - PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND WORKS › Part PART A— - GENERAL › Chapter CHAPTER 37— - CONTRACT WORK HOURS AND SAFETY STANDARDS › § 3704
For federal construction, repair, or painting contracts over $100,000 covered by Reorganization Plan No. 14 of 1950 (effective May 24, 1950), contractors and subcontractors must not force workers to labor in unhealthy, unsafe, or dangerous conditions. The Secretary of Labor creates construction safety and health rules after public-type hearings and must talk with an advisory committee while making those rules. The Secretary can inspect jobs, hold hearings, and order fixes to get compliance, and federal courts help enforce those orders. If a contractor keeps breaking the rules willfully or through gross carelessness and other steps don’t protect workers, the Secretary will find that and, after at least 30 days’ notice, send the contractor’s name to the Comptroller General. That name goes to all federal agencies and, unless the Secretary says otherwise, the contractor cannot get covered federal contracts for 3 years. The Secretary can lift the ban sooner after a hearing. Anyone upset by the Secretary’s actions has 60 days to ask a U.S. court of appeals to review the decision. An Advisory Committee of nine people (three contractor reps, three worker reps from building trades, three public safety experts) helps the Secretary. Committee members may be paid up to $100 a day plus travel expenses.
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Public Buildings, Property, and Works — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Reference
Citation
40 U.S.C. § 3704
Title 40 — Public Buildings, Property, and Works
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73