Let's agree not talk anymore about whether the professor can be charged as an employer would. One of the earlier posts had a link to an article
By Jyllian Kemsley =E2=80=A2 Posted in Academia, Accidents
that explains this once and for all:
"Harran faces four counts of violating California Labor Code section 6425(a), which makes it a crime for "Any employer and any employee having direction, management, control, or custody of any employment, place of employment, or of any other employee" to willfully violate an occupational safety or health standard in such a way that causes death or permanent or prolonged impairment of the body of an employee. Each charge refers to a certain regulation: Title 8, sections 5191(f)(4), 3203(a)(6), 3383(a), and 3383(b)."
Done. They can do it.
And "documented training" means exactly what it says. Sit down sessions provided by the school or the professor with attendance taken and ideally a short test at the end to provide proof of comprehension. And a record of the subject matter is kept with the records to be certain the required safety subjects were addressed. Sadly this means the school also has to make sure their professors have been properly safety trained which is not always the case.
My admittedly twisted mind sees this whole thing differently than those who have commented. I see that the AG settled with the Regents by having them promise to do the training and have the proper programs in place that the Regents should have had all along. So that means a school can ignore the CalOSHA rules and wait until someone is killed without consequences. Only after this sad event do they actually have to comply with the laws.
I fully expect that the AG will settle with the Professor as well. And the result will lead to the same conclusion. Each professor can be responsible for one death before they will actually have to do formal safety training and actually enforce the safety rules on their students. Business as usual for most schools is what I fully expect to see after all this khazer-drek is over. I apologize on my knees in advance if I am wrong.