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🏭 SC's Largest Employer Sector

Manufacturing Workers' Comp in South Carolina

South Carolina is one of the most manufacturing-intensive states in the Southeast. BMW, Michelin, Boeing suppliers, and hundreds of smaller manufacturers navigate complex WC class codes and loss control requirements.

South Carolina's Manufacturing Economy: Scale & Scope

South Carolina has more than 100,000 manufacturing jobs β€” the backbone of the state's economy.

BMW Spartanburg

Largest BMW manufacturing facility outside Germany. Produces 500+ vehicles per day. Directly employs 10,000+; supply chain employs tens of thousands more.

Michelin Greenville

World headquarters. Major tire manufacturing. Employs thousands directly. Supply chain for Michelin alone spans hundreds of SC suppliers.

Boeing Charleston

Aircraft systems manufacturing and assembly. Major aerospace supply chain. Employs 6,000+ directly with thousands more in supplier ecosystem.

Beyond the big three, SC has hundreds of smaller manufacturers β€” automotive suppliers, food processing, chemicals, electronics, machinery, textiles, and everything in between. The manufacturing sector is geographically concentrated in Greenville-Spartanburg, Charleston, and Upstate industrial corridors, but present across the entire state.

This concentration creates both opportunity and complexity for workers' compensation. Manufacturers in SC understand that their WC program is critical to competitiveness, loss control is non-negotiable, and premium accuracy directly impacts bottom-line cost.

Why Manufacturing Workers' Comp is Uniquely Complex

Dozens of Process-Specific Codes

A manufacturing facility might have welding, machining, assembly, inspection, material handling, packaging, and office work β€” each with different WC codes. Accurate allocation between processes is critical and audit-intensive.

Machine Guarding & Loss History

OSHA machine guarding compliance directly correlates to your loss history and WC premium. A facility with outdated or inadequate guarding will have higher claim frequency and worse experience mods.

Shift Differentials & Overtime

Manufacturing often runs 24/7 with shift premiums and heavy overtime. WC payroll must include shift differentials, overtime premiums, and bonuses β€” different from regular payroll allocation.

Supply Chain Concentration Risk

Suppliers to BMW, Michelin, or Boeing face concentrated client base risk. Loss of a major customer directly impacts your payroll and WC premium stability.

Key Manufacturing Class Codes in SC

3632 β€” Machine Shops

CNC machining, milling, turning, grinding. Very common in SC automotive supply. Medium-high hazard β€” machine guarding is critical.

Premium driver: Machine condition, guarding compliance, operator experience mod.

3365 β€” Welding & Welders

Structural and production welding. High hazard (arc flash, fumes, burns). Very common in automotive and aerospace supply.

Premium driver: Ventilation systems, PPE compliance, welder certification.

2003 β€” Food Processing

Canning, frozen food, meat processing. Repetitive motion hazards, cold exposure, sanitation concerns.

Premium driver: Repetitive strain injuries, machine guarding in processing lines.

3574 β€” Electronic Components Manufacturing

Circuit board assembly, component manufacturing, testing. Medium hazard. Growing sector in SC.

Premium driver: Chemical exposure, repetitive assembly, static control procedures.

4511 β€” Chemical Manufacturing (Low Hazard)

Chemical processing, mixing, packaging. Hazard level depends on specific chemicals β€” can be low or high.

Premium driver: Chemical safety protocols, PPE, spill procedures, SDS compliance.

8810 β€” Office & Clerical

Engineering, quality, planning, scheduling staff. Lowest hazard. Every manufacturer has office staff.

Premium driver: Ergonomics (desk injuries are still injuries), eye strain prevention.

8742 β€” Outside Sales & Engineering

Sales engineers, technical reps visiting client sites. Medium hazard if site visits required.

Premium driver: Auto exposure, client site safety compliance if manufacturing facility visits required.

Audit Intensity: Manufacturing is One of the Most Audited Industries

Manufacturers are routinely audited by their workers' compensation carriers β€” sometimes annually, especially for larger operations.

This isn't optional or discretionary. It's a standard underwriting control for the manufacturing industry. Your facility should expect:

Payroll Allocation Review

Auditors will verify that each employee is coded correctly and consistently. If you've misclassified welders as machine operators, it gets added at audit.

Process Classification Verification

A walk-through of your facility to confirm the processes match your stated operations and payroll allocation.

Shift & Overtime Documentation

Verification that shift premiums and overtime are correctly included in WC payroll (they must be).

Loss History Interview

Discussion of any significant claims. Why did they occur? What corrective actions were taken? This directly impacts your experience mod.

Loss Control: OSHA Compliance = Better WC Premium

Direct correlation: Manufacturers with strong OSHA compliance programs and documented loss control initiatives have demonstrably better workers' compensation loss experience and renewal rates.

This is not theoretical. Carriers have data showing that facilities with active safety programs, machine guarding audits, and employee training have fewer claims and lower claim severity.

What Carriers Look For

  • βœ“ Written safety program with documented procedures
  • βœ“ Machine guarding audit and compliance program
  • βœ“ Annual safety training log for all employees
  • βœ“ Near-miss reporting and investigation procedures
  • βœ“ PPE selection and fit-testing documentation

Premium Impact

A manufacturer with:

  • Good loss control program: Experience mod 0.95–1.00 (normal to below normal)
  • Weak or no program: Experience mod 1.10–1.30+ (significantly above normal)

The difference: 15–30%+ in annual premium for the same operation.

What Manufacturing Companies Should Review Today

Production Process Class Code Accuracy

Is each employee coded to the correct process? If you run welding, machining, and assembly, is the payroll properly allocated to codes 3365, 3632, and the appropriate assembly code? Misallocation is the #1 audit finding.

Overtime Treatment in WC Payroll

Overtime MUST be included in workers' compensation payroll. Shift differentials MUST be included. Is your WC payroll report including these? Many manufacturers wrongly exclude overtime, creating audit adjustments of 10%+.

Machine-Specific Risk Assessment

Do you have a documented list of high-hazard machines? Are they guarded? Is guarding inspection performed quarterly or annually? This directly impacts your premium and auditor perception.

Experience Mod Analysis

What's your current experience modifier? Is it above 1.00 (meaning you're above standard)? If so, why? Do you understand the losses driving it? Can you dispute inaccurate claims?

Audit Preparation Documentation

Can you produce payroll allocation reports, process descriptions, safety program documentation, and training logs within 48 hours? Having these ready streamlines audits and shows professionalism.

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