Guidance Search
The Department of Labor provides this guidance search tool as a single, searchable location where users may search for guidance issued by any of the Department’s agencies, including significant guidance documents under Executive Order 12866. Individual guidance documents are maintained on the various agency websites, and if you know what agency you are looking for, you may also find guidance by navigating directly to that agency’s website. The Code of Federal Regulations and the Federal Register, which are not maintained by the Department, also include some of the Department’s interpretations of law and similar material.
OMB’s Final Bulletin for Agency Good Guidance Practices establishes policies and procedures for the development, issuance, and use of significant guidance documents by Executive Branch departments, including requiring that agencies enable the public to request that significant guidance documents be created, reconsidered, modified or rescinded. To petition for a significant guidance document to be created, modified, reconsidered, or rescinded, email the Department of Labor. Petitions should identify the specific guidance document by name and include your reason(s) for the request.
On January 20, 2021, President Biden issued the “Executive Order on Revocation of Certain Executive Orders Concerning Federal Regulation.” In response, the Department issued a final rule January 27, 2021 to rescind its August 28, 2020 rule on guidance documents.
Search Tips
- If you are searching using an acronym, try a second search with the acronym spelled out. For example, if you are searching for guidance related to the Davis-Bacon Act, try searching "Davis-Bacon Act" as well as "DBA".
- For more specific results, use quotation marks around phrases.
- For more general results, remove quotation marks to search for each word individually. For example, minimum wage will return all documents that have either the word minimum or the word wage in the description, while “minimum wage” will limit results to those containing that phrase.
Whether the Toyota Motor Manufacturing, U.S.A., Inc. Employer's Short Term Disability Plan and its Salary Continuation Plan, which pay benefits out of the employer’s general assets for absences due to certain medical reasons that equal or are a significant portion of, but do not exceed, the employee’s normal compensation, are payroll practices within the meaning of the Department of Labor regulations at 29 C.F.R. §2510.3-1(b) and therefore are not "employee welfare benefit plans" within the meaning of section 3(1) of Title I of ERISA.
Whether the Capital Metro Retirement and Savings Plan (formerly known as the Capital Metro 401(k) Plan) is a governmental plan within the meaning of section 3(32) of Title I of ERISA and, thus, excluded from ERISA Title I coverage by section 4(b)(1) of Title I of ERISA.
Whether a health benefit program (the ERM Program) offered by Employers Resource Management Company, Inc. (ERM), an employee leasing firm that markets certain services relating to employees of client companies, is a multiple employer welfare arrangement (MEWA) within the meaning of ERISA section 3(40).
This letter provides guidance on volunteers not counted as employees for the 50 employee test of employer coverage.
The meaning of the word "entrapment" as in the Permit Required Confined Space (PRCS) standard. - [1910.146]
This letter provides guidance on disability insurance.
Scheduling and prioritizing on a "worst-first" basis. - [1910.119]
Hazard warning label requirements. - [1910.1048]
OSHA does not endorse commercial products. - [1910.1030]
This letter provides guidance on the employers compliance obligations with state or local law; and the pre-FMLA enactment changes to leave policies.
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