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OSHA staff launched investigation after seeing reporter hit by SUV on TV, exposing regulatory blind spot

An Occupational Safety and Health Administration spokesperson told Discrepancy Report that the reporter’s television station did not report the incident.

“Employers are only required to report fatalities, in-patient hospitalizations, amputations, and eye loss,” she explained. “This was not required to be reported.”

The Bureau of Labor Statistics, meanwhile, said it captures no data on the risks of solo reporting and its injury statistics don’t differentiate between field journalists and journalists who are not in the field.