2025 Workplace Heat Rules What California Employers Need to Do Now

2025 Workplace Heat Rules: What California Employers Need to Do Now 

Record heat is changing how companies operate—from shift timing to safety training. Around the world, firms are adapting: Japanese employers are redesigning schedules, cooling workspaces, and issuing heat-safety gear to reduce risk and maintain productivity, as outlined by the World Economic Forum’s report on adapting workplace heat risks. 

In California, regulators have introduced new indoor heat protections that require employers to monitor conditions, provide cool-down areas and water, and implement clear response plans during heat waves. Nationally, OSHA is also moving forward with federal workplace heat rules that would standardize rest breaks, hydration, and acclimatization across industries. 

 

What this means for employers 

  • Update your heat-illness prevention plan to cover indoor spaces. Define thresholds (temp + humidity), when to trigger controls, and who authorizes changes. 
  • Engineer first, then administer. Improve ventilation and spot-cooling, relocate high-heat tasks, stagger or shorten shifts, and add recovery time. 
  • Train everyone, regularly. Teach symptom recognition, escalation steps, and acclimatization—especially for new/returning workers. 
  • Document & monitor. Track indoor conditions, record interventions (breaks, relocations, first aid), and review incidents to improve your plan. 

 

Practical playbook for summer peaks 

  • Scheduling: Move heavy work to cooler hours; rotate personnel on high-heat tasks. 
  • Facilities: Create dedicated cool-down spaces; stock electrolyte beverages; place thermometers/monitors in hot spots. 
  • Staffing: Build a flexible bench to cover heat-related absences and shift changes without burning out core teams. 
  • Communication: Send real-time heat alerts and simple “if/then” actions (e.g., “If indoor index hits X, take a 10-minute recovery every Y minutes.”). 

 

How Voyage Employer Services can help 

Voyage partners with California employers to operationalize heat safety without slowing output. We provide flexible staffing for shift moves and split shifts, safety-first onboarding aligned with California and emerging federal rules, and compliance coaching (policy templates, documentation checklists, incident reviews). 

Ready to make your operation heat-resilient? Let’s protect your team and keep productivity on track. 

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Felipe

Felipe is the Safety Manager at Voyage Employer Services, certified and well-versed in workplace safety regulations. His extensive knowledge and expertise in safety protocols ensure a secure and compliant working environment for all employees. Felipe's proactive approach to safety management helps the company mitigate risks and maintain high standards of workplace safety, contributing significantly to the overall well-being of the organization.

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