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- Tesla reportedly sent California regulators incomplete records of injuries at its main assembly plant, according to new documents obtained by Bloomberg.
- When disclosing injuries to the state, Tesla reportedly failed to mention as many as 36 injuries in 2018 alone.
- Under scrutiny about workplace injuries, Tesla has repeatedly claimed that regulators praised its record-keeping - an assertion that is undermined by the new report.
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Tesla defended the safety of its assembly plants last month, claiming in a statement that California regulators praised the company for "99% accuracy in our safety record keeping."
But there's no evidence to support that claim, according to documents maintained by California's Division of Occupational Safety and Health, newly reported by Bloomberg this week.
Transform talent with learning that worksCapability development is critical for businesses who want to push the envelope of innovation.Discover how business leaders are strategizing around building talent capabilities and empowering employee transformation.Know More A Cal/OSHA memo sent to Tesla in December reportedly shows that Tesla repeatedly failed to mention injuries at its main assembly plant in reports to the state. At least 36 injuries were left out of Tesla's records in 2018 alone. And a Cal/OSHA spokesperson said he couldn't verify Tesla's claim that regulators praised the company for "99% accuracy."
Tesla has faced scrutiny for years over its historically lackluster record on factory injuries. In 2018, Tesla factory workers told Reveal that hazardous zones were not properly marked in part because CEO Elon Musk "does not like the color yellow." Musk has claimed that Tesla is held to an unfair standard for factory injuries.
"We do get these unfair accusations, for example, that we are underreporting injuries," Musk said in an October 2018 earnings call. "It's worth noting that OSHA completed their investigation and concluded that we haven't done ... anything of the sort."
But the new report contradicts that claim. And according to Bloomberg, the three dozen injuries that Tesla reportedly failed to disclose in 2018 mean at least 4% of its reports that year were missing.
Representatives for Cal/OSHA and Tesla did not immediately respond to Business Insider's requests for comment.