WORK to Save Lives Act
Sponsored By: Representative Watson Coleman
Introduced
Summary
Expand workplace access to opioid overdose reversal medication and training. This bill would require federal agencies to acquire and maintain opioid overdose reversal medication and offer voluntary annual training to employees, and it would direct the Secretary of Labor, through OSHA, to publish nonmandatory guidance for most employers within 270 days.
Show full summary
- Federal agencies: Would be required to acquire and maintain opioid overdose reversal medication and offer voluntary annual employee training. The Veterans Health Administration is explicitly included.
- Private employers: OSHA would issue nonbinding guidance on acquiring and maintaining the medication and on offering annual voluntary training. The United States Postal Service is excluded from the employer definition for that guidance.
- Workers and workplaces: Employees would be offered voluntary annual training on using overdose reversal medication and workplaces would be encouraged to keep kits on site.
Bill Overview
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 0 costs, 0 mixed.
Required naloxone and training in Federal workplaces
This bill would require the Secretary of Labor, through OSHA, to issue regulations within 270 days. The regulations would require each Federal agency to acquire and maintain opioid overdose reversal medication (naloxone) and to offer voluntary annual training to employees on how to use it. The bill would define 'Federal agency' to include any agency or instrumentality of the Federal Government, explicitly including the Veterans Health Administration. These requirements would be binding on federal agencies.
Voluntary naloxone guidance for employers
This bill would require the Secretary of Labor, through OSHA, to publish nonmandatory guidance for employers within 270 days. The guidance would cover how to acquire and maintain opioid overdose reversal medication (naloxone) and how to offer voluntary annual employee training on its use. For this guidance, 'employer' would mean the OSHA definition in the Occupational Safety and Health Act, except the United States Postal Service would be excluded. The guidance would be voluntary and would not create a legal requirement for private employers.
Sponsors & CoSponsors
Sponsor
Watson Coleman
NJ • D
Cosponsors
Rutherford
FL • R
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Tlaib
MI • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
McIver
NJ • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Craig
MN • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Budzinski
IL • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Amo
RI • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Davis (IL)
IL • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Thanedar
MI • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Goldman (NY)
NY • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
McClain Delaney
MD • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Carson
IN • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Del. Norton, Eleanor Holmes [D-DC-At Large]
DC • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Grijalva
AZ • D
Sponsored 2/10/2026
Roll Call Votes
No roll call votes available for this bill.
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