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HB 926An Act providing for violence prevention committees in health facilities, for duties of committees, for workplace violence reporting requirements and for powers and duties of the Department of Labor and Industry; and imposing fines and administrative penalties.

Congress · introduced 2025-03-17

Latest action: Referred to LABOR AND INDUSTRY, May 22, 2025

Sponsors

Action timeline

  1. · house Referred to LABOR AND INDUSTRY, March 17, 2025
  2. · house Reported as committed, March 25, 2025
  3. · house First consideration, March 25, 2025
  4. · house Laid on the table, March 25, 2025
  5. · house Removed from table, April 24, 2025
  6. · house Second consideration, with amendments, May 5, 2025
  7. · house Re-committed to APPROPRIATIONS, May 5, 2025
  8. · house Re-reported as committed, May 6, 2025
  9. · house Third consideration and final passage, May 6, 2025 (124-79)
  10. · senate In the Senate
  11. · senate Referred to LABOR AND INDUSTRY, May 22, 2025
  12. · house (Remarks see House Journal Page 476-480), May 5, 2025
  13. · house (Remarks see House Journal Page 515-518), May 6, 2025

Text versions

No text versions on file yet — same ingest as the action timeline populates these. Each version has direct links to the XML / HTML / PDF at govinfo.gov.

Bill text

Printer's No. 0974 · 17,980 characters · source document

Read the full text
PRINTER'S NO.    974

                     THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA



                         HOUSE BILL
                         No. 926
                                               Session of
                                                 2025

     INTRODUCED BY KRUEGER, KOSIEROWSKI, PROBST, CURRY, VENKAT,
        McNEILL, HILL-EVANS, SANCHEZ, ISAACSON, PIELLI, GIRAL, KHAN,
        DONAHUE, HOHENSTEIN, BOYD, KENYATTA, WEBSTER, D. WILLIAMS,
        O'MARA, MALAGARI, RIVERA, CIRESI, DEASY, WARREN, CERRATO,
        DOUGHERTY, MULLINS AND SCHLOSSBERG, MARCH 17, 2025

     REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON LABOR AND INDUSTRY, MARCH 17, 2025


                                    AN ACT
 1   Providing for violence prevention committees in health
 2      facilities, for duties of committees, for workplace violence
 3      reporting requirements and for powers and duties of the
 4      Department of Labor and Industry; and imposing fines and
 5      administrative penalties.
 6      The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
 7   hereby enacts as follows:
 8   Section 1.   Short title.
 9      This act shall be known and may be cited as the Health Care
10   Workplace Violence Prevention Act.
11   Section 2.   Definitions.
12      The following words and phrases when used in this act shall
13   have the meanings given to them in this section unless the
14   context clearly indicates otherwise:
15      "Committee."    The violence prevention committee established
16   by a health facility under this act.
17      "Department."    The Department of Labor and Industry of the
18   Commonwealth.
 1      "Employee."     An individual who is employed by a health
 2   facility.
 3      "Health facility."     A hospital, long-term care nursing
 4   facility, home health care agency, abortion facility, ambulatory
 5   surgical facility, birth center or hospice, as those terms are
 6   defined in section 802.1 of the act of July 19, 1979 (P.L.130,
 7   No.48), known as the Health Care Facilities Act. The term
 8   includes a private psychiatric hospital and public psychiatric
 9   hospital as those terms are defined in 55 Pa. Code § 1151.2
10   (relating to definitions).
11      "Program."     The workplace violence prevention program
12   established by a committee.
13      "Workplace violence."     Violence or the threat of violence
14   against an employee that occurs during the course of employment
15   or is substantially related to employment.
16   Section 3.     Violence prevention committee.
17      (a)   Establishment.--Each health facility shall establish a
18   violence prevention committee to establish, review, administer
19   and provide guidance about a program relating to the prevention
20   of workplace violence at the health facility.
21      (b)   Membership.--The committee shall be composed as follows:
22            (1)   At least one member or designee of the committee
23      shall represent management and oversee implementation of the
24      program. The committee shall be led by two cochairs, one
25      representing management and one representing the union
26      employees and nonunion employees in the case of a health
27      facility that has no union representing its employees.
28            (2)   At least 50% of the members of the committee shall
29      be nonmanagerial employees primarily engaged in direct
30      patient care or clinical care services or employees who

20250HB0926PN0974                    - 2 -
 1      interface with the public. The committee shall have a
 2      proportional representation of union employees, selected by
 3      their union, and nonunion employees, elected by secret ballot
 4      by their peers. The proportional representation shall
 5      incorporate all employees at risk of becoming a victim of
 6      workplace violence and shall include representation from all
 7      main areas of the health facility that may be subject to
 8      workplace violence.
 9            (3)   The remaining members of the committee shall be
10      selected by management and shall have experience, expertise
11      or responsibility relevant to violence prevention or other
12      expertise that is considered beneficial to the committee.
13      (c)   Compensation.--A health facility shall provide paid time
14   to employees while the employees are participating in the
15   violence prevention committee.
16   Section 4.     Duties of committee.
17      (a)   Risk assessment evaluation.--
18            (1)   Except as provided under paragraph (2), each
19      committee shall perform an initial risk assessment based on
20      an analysis of incidents of the prior five years and then
21      annually thereafter, as well as an evaluation of the factors
22      that may put an employee at risk of workplace violence. Those
23      factors shall include, but not be limited to:
24                  (i)    Working in a public setting.
25                  (ii)    Guarding or maintaining property or
26            possessions.
27                  (iii)    Working in a high-crime area.
28                  (iv)    Working late at night or early in the morning.
29                  (v)    Using commuter lots that are not adequately lit
30            or frequently patrolled.

20250HB0926PN0974                       - 3 -
 1                  (vi)    The existence of uncontrolled public access to
 2            the workplace.
 3                  (vii)    Working in a public area with individuals in
 4            crisis.
 5                  (viii)    Working in an area where a patient or
 6            resident may exhibit violent behavior or where there has
 7            been a pattern of violent behavior.
 8                  (ix)    Working in a unit that does not have adequate
 9            employee staffing levels.
10                  (x)    The existence or availability of a security
11            response team that is able to rapidly and effectively
12            respond to incidents of workplace violence.
13                  (xi)    Adequate training of employees to deal with
14            incidents of workplace violence.
15                  (xii)    The physical layout of the facility.
16            (2)   The risk assessment may be performed by an outside
17      consultant to be paid by the health facility.
18      (b)   Review.--Each committee shall meet quarterly to review
19   all incidents of workplace violence, to review compliance with
20   the program and the effectiveness of the program, to initiate
21   changes to the program where necessary and to perform any other
22   duties required under this act. The committee shall report
23   annually the results of the reviews to the department together
24   with any changes to the program adopted by the committee. If no
25   changes are adopted in response to the review, the committee
26   shall report that fact to the department.
27      (c)   Preparation of report and establishment of program.--
28   Each committee shall:
29            (1)   Prepare a report from the risk assessment evaluation
30      and establish a written violence prevention program to

20250HB0926PN0974                       - 4 -
 1      mitigate risks based on the assessment. If there is more than
 2      one health facility within a system, there shall be a program
 3      established for each health facility. The program shall be
 4      updated annually.
 5            (2)   Develop and maintain a detailed, written violence
 6      prevention plan that:
 7                  (i)    identifies and tracks incidents of workplace
 8            violence at the facility;
 9                  (ii)    identifies workplace risks;
10                  (iii)    establishes a system to identify and flag
11            individuals with a history of violence; and
12                  (iv)    provides specific methods to address workplace
13            risks.
14            (3)   Make the risk assessment report available to the
15      members of the committee.
16            (4)   Establish a method to expedite reporting and review
17      of a report of workplace violence and make written
18      recommendations to the health facility management on
19      preventing additional incidents of similar workplace
20      violence.
21            (5)   Promptly after adopting a violence prevention plan,
22      file a copy of the plan with the department.
23      (d)   Employee training.--The committee shall provide
24   appropriate employee training to employees at the time of hire
25   and annually thereafter.
26   Section 5.     Reporting of workplace violence.
27      (a)   Reporting.--An employee who reasonably believes that an
28   incident of workplace violence has occurred shall report the
29   occurrence of the incident in accordance with the violence
30   prevention plan of the health facility unless the employee knows

20250HB0926PN0974                       - 5 -
 1   a report has already been made. The report shall be made
 2   immediately after the occurrence or discovery of the incident of
 3   workplace violence or as soon thereafter as reasonably
 4   practicable.
 5      (b)   Local law enforcement reporting.--It shall be considered
 6   a violation of this act to interfere with or discourage an
 7   employee from exercising the employee's right to contact or file
 8   a report with law enforcement regarding an incident of workplace
 9   violence.
10      (c)   Retaliation.--An employee who reports the occurrence of
11   an incident of workplace violence or encourages others to
12   provide information regarding an incident of workplace violence
13   under subsection (a) may not be subject to discrimination,
14   dismissal, discipline, discharge or any other decision adverse
15   to the employee, unless the employee knowingly makes a false
16   report of an incident of workplace violence or is the
17   perpetrator of an incident of workplace violence or other
18   prohibited workplace behavior that resulted in a report by
19   another employee.
20      (d)   Maintenance of records.--A health facility shall
21   maintain a report of an incident of workplace violence,
22   including records or documents regarding the report, for a
23   period of no less than three years. A health facility that fails
24   to comply with this subsection, including falsifying the
25   information required under section 9, shall be in violation of
26   this act and subject to the penalties specified under section 7.
27   Section 6.   Distribution of reports of workplace violence.
28      A report of an incident of workplace violence that is
29   submitted to management or to the health facility shall be
30   provided to the committee within 72 hours of the submission of

20250HB0926PN0974                  - 6 -
 1   the report.
 2   Section 7.        Penalties.
 3         (a)   Administrative fine.--The department may levy an
 4   administrative fine on a health facility that violates this act
 5   or any regulation adopted under this act. The fine shall be not
 6   less than $1,000 and not more than $10,000 for each violation.
 7         (b)   Administrative order.--The department may order a health
 8   facility to take an action that the department deems necessary
 9   to correct a violation of this act, including payment of
10   restitution to an employee, a directive to change a policy or
11   procedure or a directive to remedy a retaliation prohibited
12   under section 5(c).
13         (c)   Administrative agency law.--This section is subject to 2
14   Pa.C.S. Chs. 5 Subch. A (relating to practice and procedure of
15   Commonwealth agencies) and 7 Subch. A (relating to judicial
16   review of Commonwealth agency action).
17   Section 8.        Remedies.
18         (a)   General rule.--If a health facility has engaged in
19   conduct that causes or maintains a substantial risk of further
20   workplace violence, including failing to implement the
21   recommendations of a committee, a court may enjoin the health
22   facility from engaging in the illegal activities and may order
23   any other relief that is appropriate, including, but not limited
24   to:
25               (1)   reinstatement of an employee;
26               (2)   removal of the offending party from the employee's
27         work environment;
28               (3)   reimbursement for lost wages;
29               (4)   medical expenses;
30               (5)   compensation for emotional distress; and

20250HB0926PN0974                          - 7 -
 1          (6)   attorney fees.
 2    (b)   Reports to department.--
 3          (1)   If a committee concludes that a health facility has
 4    failed to implement the safety recommendations of the
 5    committee, the committee, by vote of a majority of the
 6    members, may report the health facility's failure to the
 7    department.
 8          (2)   If, after an investigation, the department
 9    determines that the health facility is acting in bad faith
10    and failing to implement safety recommendations of the
11    committee, the department may impose penalties against the
12    health facility, including appropriate fines and
13    administrative penalties in accordance with section 7.
14          (3)   Additionally, any individual has the ability to file
15    a complaint with the department for a violation of this act.
16          (4)   If an activity, policy or practice has been reported
17    to management and, after reasonable opportunity for
18    correction, the problem has not been corrected or resolved
19    and an employee or a representative of the employees still
20    believes that a violation of the workplace violence
21    prevention program remains or that substantial risk of
22    workplace violence exists, such employee or representative of
23    the employees may request an inspection by giving notice to
24    the department of such a violation or risk. Such notice and
25    request shall be in writing, shall specify with reasonable
26    particularity the grounds for the notice and shall be signed
27    by the employee or representative of employees. A copy of
28    such notice shall be provided to the employer, except that on
29    the request of the person giving notice, such person's name
30    shall be withheld. If the department finds such a complaint

20250HB0926PN0974                  - 8 -
 1      to be credible, an inspection shall be made by the
 2      department.
 3            (5)   A representative of the employer and employees shall
 4      be given the opportunity to accompany the department
 5      representative during the inspection.
 6   Section 9.     Subpoenas and inspections.
 7      (a)   Subpoenas.--The Secretary of Labor and Industry or a
 8   designee who has investigatory subpoena authority may issue a
 9   subpoena upon the application of an attorney of the Office of
10   General Counsel assigned by the department for the purpose of
11   investigating alleged violations of this act. The department may
12   make an application to the Commonwealth Court to enforce a
13   subpoena under this subsection. Nothing in this subsection shall
14   be construed to excuse a person from producing documents and
15   records as requested by the department under any other provision
16   of State law.
17      (b)   Inspections.--The department may obtain information to
18   investigate an alleged violation of this act or determine
19   compliance with this act, including entering and inspecting a
20   health facility at a reasonable time for the purpose of
21   interviewing employees and inspecting and obtaining copies of
22   records, reports, documents or other information in any medium.
23   Section 10.     Effect on collective bargaining agreements.
24      This act may not be construed to:
25            (1)   Supersede a current provision of an employee's
26      existing collective bargaining agreement which provides
27      greater rights and protection than prescribed by this act.
28            (2)   Prevent any new provisions of a collective
29      bargaining agreement which provides greater rights and
30      protections from being implemented and applicable to an

20250HB0926PN0974                    - 9 -
 1      employee.
 2   Section 11.    Postincident services.
 3      Following an incident of workplace violence, a health
 4   facility shall, at a minimum, offer immediate postincident
 5   services, including any necessary acute medical treatment or
 6   mental health services for each employee of the health facility
 7   who is directly involved in the incident of workplace violence.
 8   Section 12.    Requirements.
 9      (a)   Signage required.--A health facility shall post signs
10   provided by the department at all public entrances of the health
11   facility to notify individuals entering the health facility that
12   the assault of an employee is considered a felony.
13      (b)   Development of signs.--The department shall consult with
14   the health facility industry in developing the signs required
15   under subsection (a).
16   Section 13.    Construction.
17      Nothing in this act shall be construed to supersede or
18   relieve a health facility from obligations and requirements set
19   forth under a Federal or State law, regulation, rule or
20   guideline governing health facilities.
21   Section 14.    Rules and regulations.
22      The department shall adopt rules and regulations necessary to
23   implement this act. The rules and regulations shall include
24   guidelines the department deems appropriate regarding workplace
25   violence prevention programs required under this act and related
26   to reporting and monitoring systems and employee training.
27   Section 15.    Effective date.
28      This act shall take effect in 180 days.




20250HB0926PN0974                     - 10 -

Connected on the graph

Outbound (3)

datetypetoamountrolesource
referred_to_committeePennsylvania Senate Labor And Industry Committeepa-leg
referred_to_committeePennsylvania House Appropriations Committeepa-leg
referred_to_committeePennsylvania House Labor And Industry Committeepa-leg

The full graph

Every typed relationship touching this entity — 3 edges across 1 category. Grouped by what the connection is; the heaviest few are shown, with a link to the full list.

Committees

Referred to committee 3 edges

Who matters

Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.

#MemberRoleSpeechesVotedScore
1Leanne Krueger (D, state_lower PA-161)sponsor05
2Arvind Venkat (D, state_lower PA-30)cosponsor01
3Ben Waxman (D, state_lower PA-182)cosponsor01
4Benjamin V. Sanchez (D, state_lower PA-153)cosponsor01
5Bridget M. Kosierowski (D, state_lower PA-114)cosponsor01
6Carol Hill-Evans (D, state_lower PA-95)cosponsor01
7Chris Pielli (D, state_lower PA-156)cosponsor01
8Christina D. Sappey (D, state_lower PA-158)cosponsor01
9Dan K. Williams (D, state_lower PA-74)cosponsor01
10Daniel J. Deasy (D, state_lower PA-27)cosponsor01
11Danielle Friel Otten (D, state_lower PA-155)cosponsor01
12Darisha K. Parker (D, state_lower PA-198)cosponsor01
13Dave Madsen (D, state_lower PA-104)cosponsor01
14Ed Neilson (D, state_lower PA-174)cosponsor01
15Elizabeth Fiedler (D, state_lower PA-184)cosponsor01
16Gina H. Curry (D, state_lower PA-164)cosponsor01
17Heather Boyd (D, state_lower PA-163)cosponsor01
18Ismail Smith-Wade-El (D, state_lower PA-49)cosponsor01
19Jacklyn Rusnock (D, state_lower PA-126)cosponsor01
20Jason Ortitay (R, state_lower PA-46)cosponsor01
21Jeanne McNeill (D, state_lower PA-133)cosponsor01
22Jennifer O'Mara (D, state_lower PA-165)cosponsor01
23Joe Ciresi (D, state_lower PA-146)cosponsor01
24Joe Webster (D, state_lower PA-150)cosponsor01
25Jose Giral (D, state_lower PA-180)cosponsor01

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

Activity

Every typed-graph event involving this entity, newest first. Each row is one edge in the influence graph; click the date to jump to its provenance.

  1. 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania Senate Labor And Industry Committee · pa-leg
  2. 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Appropriations Committee · pa-leg
  3. 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Labor And Industry Committee · pa-leg

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