ISHN
  Home
  Subscribe
  Subscribe to e-News
  Subscription Customer Service
  Online
  This Just In
  Calendar
  Digital Editions
  Showrooms
  Webinars
  Current Issue
  Cover Story
  Features
  Columns
  Web Exclusives
  Vendor News
  Product Spotlight
  Buyers Guides
  Resources
  ASSE Bookstore
  The "Checker" Bookstore
  Classifieds
  Career Search
  Archives
  Industrial Safety Video Archive
  e-News Archives
  Sites to See
  White Papers
  Market Research
  Special Collections
  Pandemic Preparedness
  Construction Safety 2010
  For Distributors Only
  Behavioral Safety
  OSHA Resources
  E-Learning
  Convention Companion
  ISHN Info
  Media Kit
  Contact Us
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
OSHA to drop Standard Industrial Classification system

December 8, 2003

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



For more than 60 years, the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) System has been used to gather data in order to determine industry-specific injury and illness rates. That's about to change, as OSHA adopts a new method next year to reflect high-tech changes in the economy.

The new system, the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), represents one of the most significant changes for statistical programs focusing on emerging economic activities. NAICS, developed using a production-oriented conceptual framework, groups establishments into industries based on the activity in which they are primarily engaged.

Establishments using similar raw material inputs, similar capital equipment and similar labor are classified in the same industry. In other words, establishments that do similar things in similar ways are classified together.

Every sector of the economy has been restructured and redefined. A new information sector combines communications, publishing, motion picture and sound recording, and online services, recognizing the burgeoning information-based economy. Manufacturing is restructured to recognize new high-tech industries. A new sub-sector is devoted to computers and electronics, including reproduction of software. Retail Trade is redefined. In addition, eating and drinking places are transferred to a new Accommodation and Food Services sector. The difference between Retail and Wholesale is now based on how each store conducts business. For example, many computer stores are reclassified from wholesale to retail.



|PrintEmail

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.




































BNP Media
© 2010 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy