50 Tips For More Effective Safety Training Vol 2
50 Tips For More Effective Safety Training Vol 2
50 Tips For More Effective Safety Training Vol 2
50 More Tips
For More Effective
Safety Training
Volume 2
SPECIAL REPORT
50 More Tips
For More Effective
Safety Training
Volume 2
10105000X
Vice President, Environmental, Health & Safety Markets: Ed Keating
Founder: Robert L. Brady, JD
Managing Editor: David L. Galt
Legal Editor: Ana Ellington
Production Editor: Heather Hunt
CMS Manager: Isabelle B. Smith
Content Production Specialist: Sherry Newcomb
Proofreaders: Joan Carlson,
Corinne Weber
Quality Control Associate: Linda Costa
www.blr.com
Why it matters …
◆ The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates
that 10,000 to 20,000 workers are diagnosed with pesticide poison-
ing every year.
◆ EPA regulations, as specified in 40 CFR 170.130, require employers
to train employees who use pesticides on the job.
◆ The Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s (OSHA)
Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR 1910.1200) (HazCom)
also requires worker training, as well as warning labels and access to
safety data sheets (SDSs) when employees handle or work around
pesticides on the job.
Because pesticides are so commonly used, it’s easy for workers to forget that these
products contain some very hazardous chemicals—substances that can injure or
even kill those who fail to take the proper precautions. Proper training to prevent
dangerous exposures is essential.
Begin with the basics. Basic training for pesticide workers begins with the
following information:
◆ Where and in what form pesticides may be encountered during work activities
◆ Hazards of pesticides resulting from toxicity and exposure, including acute and
chronic effects, delayed effects, and sensitization
◆ Routes through which pesticides can enter the body
◆ Signs and symptoms of common types of pesticide poisoning
◆ Emergency first aid for pesticide injuries or poisonings
◆ How to obtain emergency medical care
◆ Routine and emergency decontamination procedures, including emergency
eye-flushing techniques
What the well-dressed worker is wearing. When you’ve covered the basics, it’s
time to move on to personal protective equipment (PPE). Employees who handle
and use pesticides must wear the PPE specified on the pesticide container label.
More information about protection can be found in the SDS for the product.
Minimum protection when working with pesticides includes long sleeves, long
pants, shoes, socks, rubber gloves, and splashproof eye protection. Respirators may
be required when there is the risk of inhaling mist, dust, or fumes.
Why it matters …
◆ OSHA estimates that as many as 60,000 deaths and 860,000
occupational illnesses annually can be attributed to expo-
sure to toxic chemicals in the workplace.
◆ Studies indicate that absorption of chemicals through the
skin is the most common means of poisoning (more than
twice as common as exposure through inhalation) and can
occur without being noticed by an unprotected worker.
◆ Every 7 minutes a child under the age of 5 ends up in the
emergency room because of unintentional poisoning in
the home.
◆ Most home poisonings were caused by the misuse of common
household products, says the U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
Keep alert to poisoning hazards on the job. Most workplaces contain toxic
chemicals, and those substances can poison unprepared and unprotected employ-
ees in minutes or slowly over time. There are plenty of ways toxic chemicals can
get into the body. For example, they can be inadvertently swallowed if a worker has
chemicals on his hands when he wipes his mouth. Or, if after working with a toxic
chemical, an employee eats, drinks, or smokes without first washing his or her
hands. Even more likely, chemicals can enter the body through the skin, or they
can be inhaled. To prevent poisoning on the job, train employees to take these
basic precautions:
◆ Always wear assigned PPE and make sure it fits properly.
◆ Keep food, coffee mugs, soda cans, and other personal items out of the work
area.
◆ When working around chemicals, wash thoroughly before eating, drinking,
smoking, applying makeup, putting in contact lenses, or using the toilet.
◆ Wash immediately after any potential exposure to a toxic chemical.
◆ Change out of work clothing that may have been contaminated by toxic sub-
stances and shower or wash thoroughly before going home.
◆ Launder potentially contaminated work clothes separately from family laundry.
◆ Store street clothes separate from work clothes and away from any possible
poisonous substances.
Prevent poisoning at home. Most poisonings happen in the home, and most inci-
dents involve young children. Make sure your employees know how to poison-proof
their homes by recommending the following simple but effective precautions:
◆ Keep all household cleaning products, medicines, and chemical products in
home workshops and garages out of reach of the children—preferably in
locked cabinets above waist height.
Compressed gases
Working with compressed gases
29 CFR 1910.101-105
Why it matters …
◆ Compressed gas is often flammable and can explode like a
bomb.
◆ When ignited, cylinders can also be as destructive as a
missile, flying through the air, spinning, ricocheting, and
crashing through anything in their path.
◆ Some compressed gases are toxic and can make workers
sick—or kill them.
◆ All too often workers don’t recognize, or sufficiently
appreciate, these serious hazards and, as a result, fail to
take appropriate precautions.
Why it matters …
Your confined space entrants could face life-threatening
hazards such as:
◆ Flammable gas, vapor, mist, or dust at levels high enough to
cause a fire or explosion
◆ Toxic, gas, vapor, mist, or dust at levels high enough to cause
illness or death if inhaled
◆ Oxygen levels below what you need to breathe, causing
suffocation
◆ Liquids or flowing solids (e.g., sand) that could cover, bury,
or smother
◆ Entrapping design (e.g., walls that curve in, floors that slope
and taper down)
◆ Heat high enough to cause exhaustion or heatstroke
◆ Falls caused by damp floors, slippery handholds, or
entrapping spaces
◆ Noise that could damage hearing or make it hard to hear
directions or warnings
◆ Energy and/or equipment that could cause electrocution,
fire, or explosion
Confined spaces are dangerous places. They often contain numerous hazards—
some potentially fatal.That’s why everyone associated with a confined space entry
has to be properly trained and work together to make sure the workers who go in
come out safely.
Bring them back alive. Authorized entrants are the ones at risk from the
moment they step inside a confined space until they exit. They must be trained to:
◆ Identify confined space hazards and the potential consequences of those haz-
ards to their safety and health.
◆ Recognize the signs and symptoms of dangerous exposures.
◆ Operate any equipment necessary to test, monitor, and ventilate the atmos-
phere in a confined space; communicate with others working inside and out-
side the space; and protect themselves from exposure to hazards.
◆ Wear a harness attached to a retrieval line (or when appropriate, wristlets) to allow
for a speedy rescue in an emergency. (Of course, entrants generally also need to
wear other PPE, such as a hard hat, eye protection, and protective clothing.)
◆ Remain in contact with the attendant outside the space, alerting the attendant
immediately to any signs of exposure or other danger in the space.
◆ Know how to leave the space quickly and safely after identifying a problem or
getting a signal or order from the attendant or entry supervisor to evacuate.
Why it matters …
◆ The human body is a good conductor of electricity. Given
enough voltage, electrical current can stop a heart in sec-
onds, and in fact, electrocution is among the main causes
of workplace deaths.
◆ Electricity can also be converted into heat by the body and
literally cook a victim. This can happen even at a fairly low
voltage as long as the power is high enough to heat the
body faster than it can get rid of the generated heat.
Foot safety
Toe-tapping tips for better foot protection
29 CFR 1910.136
Why it matters …
◆ Foot-related injuries are more common than most people
think—about 500 a day in U.S. workplaces.
◆ The majority of those injuries occur when workers aren’t
wearing the right foot protection.
◆ The two major categories of work-related foot injuries are
injuries from punctures, crushing, and lacerations; and
injuries resulting from slips, trips, and falls, including sprains
and broken bones.
◆ A single foot injury can cost your company thousands of
dollars in medical bills and lost work time.
Most of your employees probably don’t think much about their feet—until a foot is
injured or begins to hurt. Damage to even one bone, ligament, or muscle in the foot
can be very painful and make it difficult or impossible for workers to keep on their
feet and do their jobs.
There are all kinds of hazards waiting for unprotected feet. Foot injuries on
the job can result from:
◆ Broken bones caused by heavy falling or rolling objects
◆ Bruises and stubbed toes caused by bumps
◆ Puncture wounds from sharp objects
◆ Sprains from slips, trips, and falls
◆ Amputations caused by machinery and tools
◆ Burns from hot or hazardous substances
◆ Electrical shock from electrical hazards
Why it matters …
◆ As with any other kind of vehicle accident, wearing a seat
belt while operating a forklift can minimize injuries and
save lives.
◆ The safest place for a forklift operator to be in the event of
a rollover is strapped into his or her seat, protected by the
ROP.
◆ In case after case, investigators of forklift fatalities almost
always list,“Ensure that all workers wear seat belts on fork-
lifts” as one of the recommendations for preventing future
accidents.
Forklift operators should wear seat belts. Why? Analysis of forklift accidents
reveals that the operators who were injured or killed were often not wearing seat
belts. While seat belts can’t prevent accidents, they can prevent serious injuries and
save lives. Here are three real accident reports that tell the story:
1. An employee was using a forklift to move waste material into a large, drive-in
waste Dumpster on the company’s outdoor loading dock. He’d just dumped a
load and was backing out of the Dumpster when he backed off the side of the
loading dock, falling just under 4 feet to the pavement below. Since he wasn’t
wearing a seat belt, he was thrown from the forklift and was crushed under the
truck’s rollover cage. He died 9 days later.
2. An employee was driving an unloaded forklift down a ramp with a 13 percent
slope when the forklift started to tip over.The operator attempted to jump clear,
and the rollover protective structure (ROP) landed on him and killed him.The
employee was not wearing the supplied seat belt.
3. A forklift operator drove his truck down a ramp rapidly and appeared to be
attempting to make a sharp left turn.The forklift overturned. Apparently, the
employee was unaccustomed to the quickness and sharp turning radius of the
new forklift. He was also not wearing the provided seat belt, and when he fell
from the seat, his head was caught under the overhead protective cage.
What OSHA says about forklifts and seat belts. Here’s a direct quote:
“OSHA’s enforcement policy on the use of seat belts on powered industrial trucks
is that employers are obligated to require operators of powered industrial trucks
that are equipped with operator restraint devices, including seat belts, to use the
devices. CSHOs [Compliance Safety and Health Officers] will enforce the use of
such devices under Section 5(a)(1) of the OSH Act.”
Getting operators to wear their seat belts—easier said than done! Some com-
mon complaints from operators are that the seat belts are restricting and that it’s
easy to forget to put the belt on when they have to get in and out of a truck a lot.
Keep in mind that you are likely to hear the same kinds of excuses you get from
Why it matters …
◆ It’s estimated that somewhere between 20 percent and
30 percent of forklift accidents involve tipovers.
◆ Many of these accidents result in fatalities, especially when
the operator is not wearing a seat belt.
◆ Experience proves that operators who are properly trained,
keep within the forklift’s load capacity, and follow rules of
safe operation avoid tipovers.
Hazard Communication
What your workers don’t know can hurt them
29 CFR 1910.1200
Why it matters …
◆ There are over 650,000 hazardous chemical products found
in over 3 million workplaces across America.
◆ More than 32 million American workers are exposed to
hazardous substances in their workplaces.
◆ Hazard communication violations are consistently on
OSHA’s top 10 most frequently violated standards.
Hot work
Hot tips for working in the heat
Why it matters …
◆ The combination of heat, humidity, and human labor can
be deadly.
◆ Every year thousands of workers end up in the emergency
room suffering from heat-related illness—and some of them
end up dying.
◆ Training workers to understand heat hazards and how to
take the proper precautions to prevent heat-related illness
will not only protect their health, it will also keep them on
the job where you need them, even on the hottest days.
Health risks rise along with the mercury. Those who must work outdoors in high
temperatures—or indoors where processes or inadequate air-conditioning create a
steamy hot environment—see a different side of summertime than most. Because
heat can cause a range of ailments from discomfort to death, it’s essential that your
workers, and their supervisors, understand the risks and how to protect against them.
That means with summer on your doorstep and the temperatures already starting to
soar, this is the right time to arrange some “hot” safety training.You’ll want to explain
the possible health hazards of working in the heat, along with precautions for avoid-
ing illness and basic first aid if a coworker is affected by the heat.
Why it matters …
◆ The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) surveys
have indicated that a large percentage of workers do
not read labels for pesticides and other chemicals.
◆ There are more OSHA citations for violations of
HazCom than any other general industry standard.
◆ To state the obvious—hazardous chemicals are
hazardous, causing such tragedies as fires, explosions,
and serious illness if not handled properly.
The labels provide workers with immediate visual reminders of hazards. The
elements of a GHS-compliant label include:
◆ Product Identifiers: Chemical name, code, quantity, etc.
◆ Supplier Information: Manufacturer’s company name and contact information.
◆ Pictograms: Nine different black symbols with a diamond-shaped red border
that depict the hazard classification of the given chemical.
◆ Hazard Statements: Various detailed phrases describing the hazards associ-
ated with a chemical, e.g., flammable gas, fatal if swallowed, causes eye irritation.
◆ Precautionary Statements: Four types of precautionary statements must
be on each label: prevention, response, storage, and disposal.
◆ Signal Word: One of two signal words for alerting the level of hazard on
each label:
—DANGER—more severe hazards possible.
—WARNING—less serious hazard.
◆ Supplemental Information: Any other instructional information that the
chemical manufacturer would like to provide.
The nine pictograms used are designed for quick recognition and conform to what
other GHS users across the world expect to see. Even though the GHS uses nine
pictograms, OSHA enforces for eight, since the environmental hazard pictogram
represents the kind of hazard that the EPA enforces.
These pictograms do not replace the diamond-shaped labels required by the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT), which go on chemical drums, totes, tanks,
and other containers for transport.
Training is needed to explain and reinforce the information presented in the SDSs
and on the chemical container labels to ensure that your employees understand
the chemical hazards in their workplace and are aware of the protective measures
they need to follow. If you decide to use alternative workplace labels and the GHS-
compliant label, you will need to train your employees on both. In other words,
employees must not lose any protections they have under HazCom.
Why it matters …
◆ Falls from ladders kill hundreds of workers every year.
◆ Many thousands more suffer serious, sometimes
disabling, injuries that can keep them out of work for
a long time.
◆ Some workers might even be permanently disabled and
never able to return to their regular jobs.
You can easily prevent ladder accidents because most of them are caused by
either risky behavior or faulty setup of ladders. Fortunately, both of these mistakes
can be corrected with a simple training session.
Make sure employees understand the rules for safe ladder setup:
◆ Place the ladder on a firm, level surface, and check to make sure it’s stable. Use
wide boards under a ladder if the ground is soft.
◆ Never set up a ladder in front of a door unless the door is locked or someone
is posted on the other side to keep people from opening it while you’re up on
the ladder.
◆ Never lean a ladder against a window or any other surface that isn’t strong
enough to support the weight of a person.
◆ Never lean a ladder against a surface that might move.
◆ Fully extend the spreaders on a stepladder and lock them in place before
climbing.
◆ Secure locking devices on extension ladders before climbing.
Stress these special rules for setting up extension ladders:
◆ Secure the ladder top and bottom to make sure it doesn’t shift while you are
on it. (This is one of the most common reasons for ladder accidents and
injuries.)
◆ Have at least 3 feet of extension above the support point.
◆ Make sure that the upper section of an extension ladder overlaps and rests on
the bottom section. The overlap should always be on the climbing side of the
ladder. For ladders of 36 feet or more, the overlap should be least 3 feet.
Train employees to follow these safety rules when climbing and working on
ladders:
◆ Check your shoes before you climb, and wipe off wet, muddy, or greasy soles.
◆ Allow only one person on a ladder at a time.
◆ Face the ladder when you go up or down, holding on to the side rails with both
hands as you climb.
Lifting
Proper lifting techniques
Why it matters …
◆ Nearly 1,000 American workers injure their backs on the job
every day.
◆ The majority of these injuries occur while an employee is
lifting, carrying, or unloading materials.
◆ Once injured, backs are more susceptible to reinjury.
◆ Back injuries contribute significantly to lost workdays and
lost productivity.
Safe lifting is as easy as one, two, three. The secret to safe lifting is to:
1. Assume the safe lifting position. Stand close to the object and keep a wide
stance. Keep feet turned out and heels down. Then squat by bending at the
hips and knees. Ears, shoulders, and hips should form a nearly straight, vertical
line.
2. Prepare to lift. Pull the load close to the body (this reduces pressure on the
back) and grasp the object firmly. Tighten stomach muscles.
3. Let your legs do the lifting. Maintain the natural curves of the spine and rise
up from the squatting position using the legs to power the lift. Don’t bend over
at the neck, shoulders, or waist while lifting.
Machine safety
En ‘Guard’! Dueling with machine hazards
29 CFR 1910.211-222
Why it matters …
◆ It’s been estimated that every year workers who operate and
maintain machinery suffer approximately 18,000 amputa-
tions, and more than 800 die as a result of machine-related
accidents.
◆ Failure of machine safeguards or employee ignorance of
machine guarding requirements are contributing factors in
many of these accidents.
◆ Workplace amputations are one of the most costly workers’
compensation claims.
◆ One-third of nonfatal machine-related amputations result in
31 days or more away from work, and some injured workers
are permanently disabled and can never return to their
regular jobs.
Why it matters …
◆ Over 30 million American workers are exposed to haz-
ardous chemicals on the job. OSHA’s HazCom covers
some 650,000 chemical products found in over 3 million
establishments.
◆ The SDS is the vital link between employees and the
information they need to work safely with chemicals.
◆ Employees who don’t understand hazards and protections
are more likely to have accidents and dangerous exposures.
◆ SDS violations make their way onto OSHA’s most-frequent-
violations list nearly every year, with hundreds of companies
cited for failing to make SDSs readily available or failing to
train their workers to interpret the safety and health infor-
mation contained in the SDS.
Safety data sheets (SDSs) are a critical component of OSHA’s HazCom. In fact,
OSHA calls SDSs “a one-stop shopping resource for everything you might need or
want to know about a chemical.”
Your employees might be interested to know that rudimentary forms of data
sheets have been available since the 19th century, and some trace their history
much further back to hieroglyphics found inside the Egyptian pyramids regarding
the effects of various chemicals. Originally referred to as material safety data sheets
(MSDSs), there was no standard format for the MSDSs, so they came in multiple
formats for decades. In 2012, OSHA adopted the GHS. The GHS is an internation-
ally agreed-upon system, created by the United Nations. It is designed to replace the
Why it matters …
◆ In 1984, when 40 metric tons of toxic methyl isocyanate
were released from a Union Carbide pesticide plant in
Bhopal, India, 3,000 people died; 100,000 were injured; and
50,000 were left partially or totally disabled.
◆ In more than 20 years since, there have been nearly 200 seri-
ous incidents involving highly hazardous chemicals in the
United States, according to the Chemical Safety Board.
◆ On average, six of these incidents per year have resulted in
injuries, and there has been an average of five fatalities
annually.
◆ Nearly 50 of these incidents affected the public.
Scaffold safety
Do’s and don’ts
29 CFR 1910.28-29
Why it matters …
◆ It is estimated that more than 2 million construction workers
frequently work on scaffolds.
◆ OSHA estimates that protecting these workers from scaffold-
related accidents would prevent 4,500 injuries and 50 deaths
every year.
◆ Improved safety performance can also translate into
$90 million saved in lost workdays.
A lot of workers get hurt—and some get killed—every year in scaffold accidents.
But the good news is, almost all scaffold accidents can be prevented by proper
training.
Have you identified the hazards? Scaffold safety training should begin with
identification of the hazards. Common hazards include:
◆ Falls from an elevation because of lack of fall protection
◆ Collapse of the scaffold because of instability or overloading
◆ Being struck by falling tools, work materials, or debris
◆ Electrocution, principally resulting from proximity of the scaffold to overhead
power lines
Why it matters …
◆ For training to be effective, you have to schedule sessions at
times when shiftworkers are available, alert, and receptive.
◆ Without an established shiftworker training strategy, its
all too easy for essential safety training to fall through the
cracks.
◆ Because so much safety training is mandated by OSHA, you
could face compliance problems if shiftworkers fail to get
required training.
If you keep the lights burning 24/7 to provide round-the-clock service or pump up
production, you know that providing adequate safety training for your shiftworkers is
a challenge.The key to success in scheduling training for shiftworkers is accessibility.
Pull them off the line or pay them overtime? If you can afford to pull people
off the line or shut down an operation in order to train, that’s probably the best
option—and the one shiftworkers will be happiest with. But if you can’t do this,
another option is bringing workers in before their shift or keeping them after and
paying them overtime for training. The problem here, aside from the expense, is
that it’s often inconvenient for employees. And that means you might not find them
at their most receptive, which can result in failure to learn what they need to know.
One solution to this problem is to break long training sessions into bite-sized bits,
or modules. This way, you might be able to free up trainees during their shift for
short periods. Even if you can’t, this approach limits employee time commitment
and minimizes interference with personal after-hours plans, which will likely
enhance their commitment and attention.
Bring them in on their day off or staff up an extra crew? Of course, with
12-hour shifts, adding even an extra hour for training is difficult at best, and often
just plain impossible. If you train after the shift, workers will just sleep through the
session and be exhausted on their drive home. If you do it before, they lose prime
sleep time. Some companies solve the problem by bringing employees in for train-
ing on their days off and paying them for their time. If you do this, be sure to sched-
ule training sessions in the afternoon so that you don’t cut into shiftworkers’ sleep
time. Also be sure to provide trainees with the training schedule far enough ahead
so that you don’t run into scheduling conflicts with employees’ personal plans.
Another solution is to add a fifth crew to the normal four-crew schedule.That way
the extra team is available on a rotating basis for training, relief coverage, and special
assignments. Of course, although this may be an ideal option, it’s a costly one. Many
companies, however, find that the expense can be justified by the pressing need for
training and team building to support today’s high-performance work systems.
Let them schedule their own training? Why not? With today’s tech-powered
training options such as online training and self-directed CD, DVD, and PowerPoint®
training programs, letting shiftworkers schedule their own training time may provide
Why it matters …
◆ In one recent year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
reported 777 fatal falls in private industry and 255,600 non-
fatal falls.
◆ Slips, trips, and falls are estimated to account for at least
15 percent of all job-related deaths.
◆ The average direct cost for a single disabling injury
hovers near $30,000, with indirect costs significantly higher,
according to research conducted at the University of
Florida.
◆ Although construction workers accounted for a little more
than half of all workplace falls, that still leaves a large num-
ber of fall-related accidents that occur in everyday work-
place situations.
Take aim at slip and trip hazards. Slips and trips are major causes of work-
place falls and injuries. And one of the biggest contributing factors to slips, trips,
and resulting falls is improper housekeeping. Lighting can also be a factor, espe-
cially when employees move from light to dark, or dark to light areas of the work-
place. Slips, trips, and falls can also occur when workers are carrying large objects
that obscure their vision. Other causes include:
◆ Not watching where you’re going
◆ Spills and wet floors
◆ Clutter on stairs or walkways
◆ Uneven, defective flooring, worn stairs, or worn spots in carpets
◆ Wearing sunglasses in low-light areas
◆ Failure to use handrails
◆ Failure to use common sense
Train employees about slip, trip, and fall hazards and periodically refresh that
training. In addition:
Why it matters …
◆ One in five American workers report that they have been
put in danger or injured as a result of a fellow employee’s
substance abuse.
◆ Over 70 percent of substance abusers are employed.
◆ Up to 40 percent of industrial fatalities and 47 percent of
industrial injuries can be linked to substance abuse, and
substance abusers are more than three times as likely to
have an accident on the job.
◆ Alcohol and drug abuse has been estimated to cost
American businesses billions of dollars every year in lost
productivity, healthcare costs, and workers’ compensation
claims.
Why it matters …
◆ Tornadoes, floods, hurricanes, and other weather emergen-
cies can strike with incredible force and sometimes very lit-
tle warning.
◆ Proper training and preparation saves lives and minimizes
destruction of property.
◆ The better prepared your employees are for a weather emer-
gency, the sooner your organization can be back up and
running after the weather clears.
Welding safety
Refresher
29 CFR 1910.251-255 (Subpart Q)
Why it matters …
◆ Welding is a hazardous activity that poses a unique combi-
nation of both safety and health risks to more than 500,000
workers in a wide variety of industries.
◆ Because it is a common operation in many workplaces, its
hazards are often underappreciated.
◆ OSHA reports that more than four deaths per thousand
workers are attributed to welding accidents.
OSHA requires special training for welders. OSHA says that employees
involved in welding operations must receive detailed training in the safe operation
of their equipment and the safe use of the process.
◆ Welders must be suitably trained in the safe operation of equipment and the
selection of appropriate PPE. Only trained and qualified personnel are allowed
to use welding equipment.
◆ Firewatchers must be trained in the use of fire extinguishing equipment and
know how to sound the alarm in the event of a fire.
◆ Workers who handle oxygen and fuel-gas supply equipment must be trained to
recognize the hazards and take necessary safety precautions to prevent fires
and explosions.
Adult learners
What types of learners are your employees and
why does it matter?
Why it matters …
◆ You invest a lot of resources in employee training, and if
they don’t learn, all the money, time, and effort go down
the drain.
◆ If employees don’t learn what they need to know to protect
themselves from job hazards, they are more likely to have
accidents.
◆ Making sure safety training appeals to the needs of adult
learners, to individual learning styles, and to different per-
sonality types is the best way to ensure employees learn the
skills and information they need to keep safe and healthy
on the job.
Why it matters …
◆ Audio conferences are a quick, easy, timely, and cost-
effective way for managers to learn about important safety
issues.
◆ Participants learn what they need to know from experts
without having to leave the workplace for training.
◆ Large groups of managers or supervisors can be trained
in-house, at the same time, and in a variety of fields that
are critical to the safe operation of your facility.
Do you have trouble finding the time to get up to speed with current train-
ing topics? Need expert advice about critical safety issues? Don’t want to spend
time away from the office at conferences or distant specialized training sessions?
Try a safety audio conference. An audio conference is remarkably cost-effec-
tive and convenient.You participate from your facility using a regular telephone.
You have no travel costs and no out-of-office time. Plus, for one price you can get
as many other trainers or managers in your group to participate as you can fit
around a speakerphone.
Here’s how it works. Audio conferences are generally 90-minute live training ses-
sions about a particular topic. There are usually two or more speakers—experts in
their field—who discuss the topic with a conference host. Participants dial in via a
special phone number and listen in over their own telephones or around a speak-
erphone.
Along with the audio portion of the presentation, you may also receive a handout
that supports the live discussion. The handout outlines the training points so you
can follow along as the conference progresses. Handouts also provide a takeaway,
which serves as a permanent reminder of the key points learned in the training
session. After the speakers have thoroughly discussed the issues (about an hour),
the conference usually wraps up with a question-and-answer period for the
remaining 30 minutes or so.You can either e-mail questions or phone them in. CDs
of the session are also available if you miss the live session or want to keep a per-
manent recording.
Audio conferences offer many benefits. Aside from being cost-effective and
convenient, audio conferences are also a timely way to bring yourself up to speed
on hot-button issues that have a big impact on the safe operation of your business.
You get the opportunity to learn from nationally recognized experts in the field. In
addition, the electronic hookup makes it possible to poll the audience to find out
about their specific needs and concerns so that the speakers can address these
directly during the conference.
Why it matters …
◆ Safety experts say that the overwhelming majority of work-
place accidents are the result of unsafe behavior rather than
unsafe conditions.
◆ Changing unsafe behavior depends on changing how
employees think about safety—they have to understand
why as well as how.
◆ Behavior change is an ongoing process that requires long-
term commitment and daily follow-up.
Customization
Do I need to customize outside training materials?
Why it matters …
◆ To capture and retain the attention of trainees, safety train-
ing has to be meaningful and teach specific, practical infor-
mation that employees can actually use.
◆ For training to be transferred effectively from the classroom
or computer to the job, it must relate to an employee’s
experience in real-life work situations.
◆ OSHA regulations target specific hazards, operations, materi-
als, procedures, etc., which means your safety training must
focus on the specifics of your workplace as well.
Diversity
How to adapt training for a diverse audience
Why it matters …
◆ The American workforce is more diverse than ever before
and becoming more so every year.
◆ During the past 10 years, 51 percent of new entrants into the
United States workforce have been minorities.
◆ Over the next 10 years, there will be a dramatic increase in
minority workers, particularly ethnic minorities, some of
whom may lack proficiency in spoken and/or written
English and familiarity with common workplace safety
precautions.
The times they’ve been a changin’. The United States has long been thought of
as the world’s “melting pot,” a place where diverse cultures blend into a uniquely
American way of life. But that’s been changing. The melting pot is fast becoming a
Why it matters …
◆ You spend a lot of time and money on safety training, so if it
isn’t meeting objectives, you’re wasting valuable resources.
◆ The best way to find out if training is working is to get input
from trainees, supervisors, and trainers.
◆ Feedback ensures that the information and skills taught
during training sessions and required for regulatory compli-
ance are getting back to the worksite and being used by
employees on the job.
◆ Feedback also helps you improve the quality and effective-
ness of your training programs.
Training’s done, so your job’s done, too, right? Wrong! A successful training
program isn’t complete without an evaluation of training effectiveness. It’s impor-
tant to know whether trainees learned what they needed to learn in training to
work safely on the job. And you won’t know that unless you ask them. Don’t forget
to ask trainers and supervisors (who might or might not be the same person) for
their feedback as well. Without feedback from all angles about the effectiveness of
your training programs, you could be wasting a lot of time and money.
What kind of information do you need? Feedback about safety training helps
you assess future training needs and develop effective plans for meeting those
needs. That means the input you get about your training programs needs to answer
questions such as:
◆ Was training delivered as planned, on time, and to the appropriate employees?
◆ Which training methods worked well with which topic and trainees, and which
methods failed to achieve desired objectives?
◆ Can you identify any specific problems that interfered with the overall effec-
tiveness of a training session?
◆ How effective were trainers at engaging trainees and conveying information?
◆ How did training affect employee performance?
◆ Did it satisfy regulatory requirements?
◆ Were all stated goals achieved? If not, why?
How can you get the answers? One way to get the answers you need is to evalu-
ate your training programs from four perspectives.
1. Ask for input. You need feedback from trainees on both content and presen-
tation. This is easily accomplished by using uniform feedback forms to be
completed by trainees immediately following the session. Feedback forms
usually ask questions about the program, such as:
◆ Were the objectives of the session clearly stated?
◆ Do you think the training achieved its objectives?
Follow-up training
The crucial link between learning and job success
Why it matters …
◆ If employees don’t transfer the skills and knowledge from
training to their jobs, you’re wasting precious training time
and dollars.
◆ Follow-up helps sort out any application problems so that
you can avoid costly mistakes on the job.
◆ It ensures that yours is a learning and growing organization,
which is essential for dealing effectively and swiftly with
change in a competitive global economy.
All too often trainers heave a sigh of relief when the training session is over and
trainees depart to go back to work. But the end of the training session doesn’t sig-
nal the end of a trainer’s job. In fact, this is when a crucial stage in the training
process is just beginning. If you don’t follow up to make sure trainees apply what
they’ve learned when they go back to their jobs, you could be wasting all the time
and money you just spent on training.
Motivation
How to add motivation and inspiration to your training
Why it matters …
◆ Safety training is one of your best opportunities to protect
employees and prevent job-related injuries and illness.
◆ If trainees are bored, restless, inattentive, and uninterested in
training sessions, they’re not going to leave with the informa-
tion they need to be safe on the job.
◆ The effort you spend on creating and delivering motivational
safety training that inspires trainees to be alert to hazards
and work more safely will be repaid many times over with
improved safety performance and fewer workplace accidents.
Multiple locations
Organizing your training across multiple locations
Why it matters …
◆ You need to be sure that all trainees in all locations receive
standard, up-to-date safety information.
◆ The cost and inconvenience of bringing employees to a
central location for training or sending trainers out to far-
flung locations often make these impractical alternatives.
◆ By developing strategies that allow central planning and
preparation of training materials, but local scheduling and
execution, you can get the best return on your safety train-
ing investment.
If your company has training groups spread all over the place, this tip’s for you.
Assemble training packs. Create training packs to send to each training location.
Supervisors at each location can use the materials to train their employees. That
way you’ll be sure all employees everywhere are getting the same accurate, com-
plete, company-approved safety information, without having to bring workers
together in a central location for training or to send trainers out to employees.
Among the training materials you could include in a pack are:
◆ Training guides for supervisors
◆ Booklets and other handouts for employees
◆ Video/DVD
◆ PowerPoint presentations
◆ CD training programs
◆ Posters
◆ Policy statements
◆ OSHA regulations
Training packs are an inexpensive, convenient way to provide training at multiple
locations and at the same time be certain that the same important safety message
is reaching all your employees, no matter where they may be located.
Planning
How (and why) to plan your safety training
Why it matters …
◆ Safety training is too important to leave to chance—
failure to provide training when it’s needed could result
in an accident or an OSHA violation.
◆ Without a plan, safety training becomes hit or miss (and
more often miss than hit!).
◆ A lot of the time, money, and other resources you pour into
safety training could be wasted if you don’t plan
efficiently to ensure successful training results.
Identify the three Ts. More successful, less stressful safety training begins with a
good plan. And a good plan begins with three elements:
◆ Training needs—What topics do you need to cover? Start with OSHA-required
training and move on to areas in which you’ve had recent accidents or near
misses. These topics deserve top priority. Other topics might be suggested by
supervisors, safety committees, and employees.
◆ Training goals—What do you hope to achieve by training? Set realistic, measura-
ble goals that are achievable—for example, 100 percent compliance with PPE
rules, greater awareness of chemical hazards, or significant reduction in equip-
ment-related incidents.
Posttraining testing
Is it really necessary?
Why it matters …
◆ Successful safety and health training prevents accidents
and helps ensure compliance with OSHA requirements.
◆ Tests measure the safety competence of employees as well
as the effectiveness of your safety training program.
◆ Tests provide documentation that required training has
taken place and that employees have achieved required
training objectives.
◆ Tests indicate when additional training is necessary.
Why it matters …
◆ Some people are more text oriented and some are more
visually oriented, so you are able to get your message across
to all types of learners with slides that include both text and
graphics.
◆ A message that is easy to read and understand is always
more effective than one that is complicated and difficult.
◆ Being a PowerPoint “pro” makes both you and your impor-
tant safety message more credible.
“First, do no harm.” That familiar admonition, often used in the medical context,
should be made to apply to PowerPoint presentations as well. Many PowerPoint
users—even those with lots of presentation experience—undermine their presen-
tations by consistently making common mistakes. These include:
◆ Too much text—squeezing so many words onto a slide that they can’t be read
◆ Too many bells and whistles—using every available type of background, type-
face, animation, and graphic in a single presentation, causing viewers to
become confused and distracted
◆ Poor use of graphics—graphics are good, unless they serve no obvious pur-
pose, don’t support the main message on the slide, or are too complicated to
be understood
◆ “Patchworking”—welding together slides from several different presentations
without making the appearance and style consistent
“Market” your PowerPoint presentation like a professional. The American
Marketing Association (AMA) passes along a number of suggestions for improving
your PowerPoint presentations:
◆ Choose pictures carefully—They should be compelling, professional-looking,
and add to the message.
◆ Keep text short—AMA suggests no more than five bullets per page and five
words per bullet; others suggest a seven-line maximum, but whatever it is, keep
it short. The reason for this is that you shouldn’t be reading your slides word for
word but using them as support for your own oral presentation.
◆ Simplify each slide—The message in the text should be short and simple, and
graphs and charts must be easy to read and understand.
◆ Be careful with colors—Different colors “say” different things (for instance, blue
is soothing, red is not), so they should be compatible with your message.
Words should be readable—AMA suggests at least a 28-point typeface for head-
lines, 24-point for body text, and use a “sans serif” font that’s easier to read.
Do your handouts complement or duplicate your presentation? Many pre-
senters reproduce full-sized or miniaturized versions of their PowerPoints for distri-
bution as handouts. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, especially if there is room to
Refresher training
How to make the same topics new and interesting
Why it matters …
◆ Once you lose a trainee’s attention it’s hard to get it back.
◆ Bored trainees don’t learn or remember what they need to
know.
◆ Employees who don’t apply what they learn in training on
the job are at risk.
Been there, done that? Periodic refresher training is required by many OSHA
standards. And even when it isn’t, it’s essential for keeping safety skills sharp and
preventing a dangerous sense of complacency. But once you’ve said it all, how do
you say it all again, year after year? And if employees come in to repeat training
sessions with the attitude that they’ve heard it all before, how are you going to keep
them from tuning out?
Assess how much trainees already know. One good way to begin a repeat
training session is with a pretest to find exactly how much trainees remember from
previous training sessions. That way you can quickly review the stuff they already
know and concentrate on new information and material that got by them last time.
But instead of the same old paper and pencil test, why not turn it into a competi-
tion? That always gets everybody involved and paying attention. Divide the group
into two teams and ask a bunch of questions about the training topic. While
trainees are having fun playing the game, you can be zeroing in on knowledge
deficiencies that need to be addressed during the session.
Focus on new developments. To make refresher training new, interesting, and
relevant, emphasize what’s changed since the last training session. Are there any
new policies, work rules, or regulations that need to be discussed? Have new haz-
ards been introduced into your facility? Have new work procedures been insti-
tuted, or has new equipment been installed? Have new systems or processes been
developed and deployed? Have there been any accidents related to the subject of
your training?
Don’t use the same old training techniques every time. If you gave a lecture last
time, try a video this time, or use a computer-based product, such as a PowerPoint
presentation, to liven up the session. Bring some drama to your repeat training with
recent real-life accident or near-miss stories. Or do a demonstration. For example,
demonstrate the effectiveness of a steel-toed shoe by dropping a weight on it. See-
ing is believing, and it enhances retention. Here are some other ideas to help make
old training fresh and new:
Why it matters …
◆ Employees who don’t learn the safe way to work in training
are accidents waiting to happen.
◆ Employees learn at different rates and in different ways,
which means you need to repeat each safety message sev-
eral times in different ways to make sure you get through to
everybody.
◆ When safety involves the application of a skill, technique, or
procedure, repeated practice is essential for most employees.
◆ Without reinforcement training, most of what employees
learn in training will be lost in a very short period of time.
Self-paced training
What is it and how does it work?
Why it matters …
◆ Improves productivity
◆ Increases employee retention
◆ Enhances job satisfaction and prepares workers for promotion
◆ Assists in compliance with government regulations
◆ Improves safety performance
◆ Ensures successful integration of new technology
◆ Improves your products and services to give you the
competitive edge
What is it? Self-paced training is individualized training in which the trainee con-
trols the pace at which learning takes place. Slow learners can move slowly and
carefully to ensure comprehension and allay learning anxieties. The quick ones
can get right to it instead of having to sit, bored and frustrated, in a group setting
while others catch up. Self-paced training provides you with the capability to train
employees anytime, anywhere, and at a pace that corresponds with their skills,
knowledge, experience, and aptitude. Self-paced training materials are also usually
presented in short modules that can be completed in one sitting. And self-paced
training is often an ideal way to go for refresher training or to provide a job aid,
because employees can go back to it anytime they want or need to, to brush up on
skills or review information.
Trainer training
Don’t forget to train your trainers
Why it matters …
◆ Not everybody is born with the qualities and skills of a good
trainer—but anybody can learn to be a good trainer.
◆ Effective trainers ensure that employees learn the skills and
are provided with the safety information they need to avoid
accidents.
◆ Well-trained trainers help your organization comply with
safety and health regulations and protect employees from
workplace hazards.
Some people seem to be born with the qualities to be good trainers. They’re:
◆ Good communicators
◆ Knowledgeable
◆ Experienced
◆ Good with people
◆ Interested in learning
◆ Patient
◆ Open-minded
◆ Creative
◆ Well-prepared
◆ Flexible
◆ Well-organized
But most trainers weren’t born with all the necessary qualities and skills.
They had to learn them. And your trainers will probably have to learn them, too, in
informative, skill-building sessions. Train-the-trainer training should start with under-
standing how adults learn—because, after all, that’s who your trainers are going to
be training.
Adults don’t like being treated like kids. They don’t want to sit there being
lectured to like they were in high school. They want to:
◆ Know why they are learning (specifically how it benefits them and how it will
be useful)
Why it matters …
◆ Many companies have reported that using Web-based train-
ing (WBT) has resulted in lower training costs, sometimes
by millions of dollars for large organizations.
◆ Surveys of trainees who used WBT show higher satisfaction
with training and better retention of material.
◆ The human brain needs to “rest” every 5 minutes or so when
taking in information. WBT accommodates this need by
allowing self-paced learning.
Why it matters …
◆ Thousands of eye injuries occur in American workplaces
every day, and some of them result in permanent vision loss.
◆ The majority of injuries are caused by particles or objects
striking the eye; chemical burns are also common.
◆ Government safety experts say that proper eye protection
can prevent more than 90 percent of workplace eye injuries.
It doesn’t have to be National Eye Care Month to make eye safety a priority at your
facility. However, when you do turn the spotlight on workplace eye safety, be pre-
pared for what you may see or hear. For example, you might see employees work-
ing without any eye protection at all or using the wrong kind. Or you might catch
them with safety glasses perched on top of their heads instead of over their eyes.
You might hear excuses like,“This’ll just take a minute,” or “I was in a hurry and I
guess I forgot my safety glasses in my locker.” If this is what you find, it’s a pretty
good indication that there’s a future eye injury out there waiting to happen. To
prevent that, you’ll want to take three critical steps this month.
1. Get them to wear eye protection. OSHA regulations tell you when eye pro-
tection is required, but they don’t tell you one of the most important (and least
obvious) parts: How do you get employees to use the eye protection you pro-
vide? It isn’t easy. It takes a combination of persuasion, positive reinforcement,
close supervision, and maybe a little discipline. Here are some other training
tips that can help:
◆ Explain the need. Identify each eye hazard employees face on the job and
explain specifically how a particular type of safety eyewear protects them
against this hazard.
◆ Point out that OSHA requires it. Make sure your employees understand that
the requirement is mandated by law. The company could be cited and fined
if employees don’t use eye protection required by OSHA regulations.
◆ Dramatize the consequences of failing to use required eye protection. Tell
some horror stories or miracle stories about how employees’ eyes have
been injured because they weren’t wearing eye protection or their eyesight
was saved because they were. Show them a piece of damaged eye protec-
tion that saved a worker from an injury, if you can. Or show them a video
that dramatizes the importance of wearing eye protection. Gore is good
here. It shocks employees and shakes them out of complacency.
Why it matters …
◆ The BLS reports that there were more than 4 million non-
fatal occupational injuries and illnesses reported in one
recent year.
◆ Almost 1.3 million of those cases involved days away from
work.
◆ Also in one recent year, 5,702 employees died because of
work-related injuries and illnesses.
As the new year approaches, it’s a good time to reflect on the success of your safety
program during the past year. Was safety a top priority for everyone in your organi-
zation? Did you manage to meet objectives, or do you perhaps need to undertake
some new initiatives this year?
Hunt down and eliminate hazards. One initiative that you might consider is to
turn the spotlight on workplace hazards. For example:
◆ Take a second look at the layout and condition of work areas.
◆ Examine tools and equipment to make sure they are safe for employees to use
(and review maintenance schedules to make sure they stay that way).
◆ Observe the way employees work (you might be surprised at how many unsafe
behaviors you observe).
◆ Check to make sure that appropriate PPE (in good condition) is readily
available to all workers.
◆ Identify potential fire, chemical, electrical, and other hazards throughout your
facility and take action to eliminate these risks.
Emphasize training. Employee training is probably the most important aspect of
any successful safety program.
◆ Check OSHA standards for training requirements (many regulations have very
specific requirements).
◆ Make sure training sessions are interactive and provide plenty of opportunities
for questions and discussion.
◆ Take advantage of available technology to enhance and expand training
options.
◆ Provide lots of demonstrations and hands-on experience during training sessions.
◆ Don’t forget to provide training for supervisors and managers, too (especially
when new regulations, policies, equipment, processes, etc., are introduced).
Encourage employee participation. If employees at all levels in the organiza-
tion are actively involved in promoting workplace safety, your safety initiatives for
the year are much more likely to achieve objectives and improve overall safety.
Why it matters …
◆ On average, poison centers handle one poison exposure
every 14 seconds.
◆ Most poisonings involve everyday household items such as
cleaning supplies, medicines, cosmetics, and personal care
items.
◆ Over 60 percent of all poison fatalities occur in adults the
ages of 20 to 49.
◆ Ninety-two percent of exposures involve only one poison-
ous substance.
Are your workers playing Russian roulette with poisons? Have you ever used a
product containing chemicals without reading the health hazard information on
the label or in the SDS? According to the American Association of Poison Control
Centers, millions of Americans are exposed to potentially poisonous substances at
work and at home. Over 500,000 of those people end up in the hospital emergency
room every year, usually as a result of their own or a family member’s carelessness.
Some of the injured could be your employees (or members of their family) if they
aren’t aware of the risks and the precautions required to prevent poisoning. And
what better time to conduct poison prevention training than National Poison Pre-
vention Week during the third week in March?
Focus on these training points for workplace poison prevention. Toxic
chemicals are used as ingredients in many industrial products, and most work-
places contain at least some poisonous substances—probably yours included.
There are lots of ways to have accidents with poisons. For example, a careless
worker might swallow poison in contaminated food or beverages if he or she
keeps or consumes these in work areas in which hazardous chemicals are present.
An employee might forget about chemicals on his or her hands, rub the nose, or
Why it matters …
◆ Noise above 90 decibels can damage some of the structures
in the ear, resulting in hearing loss.
◆ Approximately 30 million American workers are exposed to
high noise levels on the job.
◆ There is no cure for hearing loss—once a worker suffers a
hearing loss, it’s irreversible (although a hearing aid might
provide some relief).
Why it matters …
◆ NIOSH says 41 percent of workplace electrocution victims
are employees who have been on the job for less than a
year.
◆ More than 60 percent of electrocution victims were males
under the age of 35.
◆ Even when it doesn’t kill, it can give a nasty shock, burn skin,
damage nerves and internal organs, and break bones in the
neck as a result of muscle contractions.
◆ Electricity can kill or injure indirectly, too. For example, an
employee on a ladder could be badly hurt from a fall when
he receives a nonfatal shock.
Are they “qualified”? Because of the potential for fatal accidents when electric-
ity is concerned, OSHA says that only “qualified” workers can perform electrical
maintenance and repairs (29 CFR 1910.132). OSHA defines qualified workers as
those who have been fully trained to identify exposed live electrical parts and
their voltage, and who have learned exactly what procedures to follow when they
work on exposed live parts or are close enough to be at risk. Everybody else is
“unqualified,” and you don’t want any of them messing around with electrical
wiring or trying to repair electrical equipment.
What do unqualified workers need to know? Although you don’t want
unqualified workers performing electrical work, those who have a job that might
expose them to the risk of electrical shock need some electrical safety training, too.
They have to know about:
◆ Electrical hazards and risks associated with using electrical equipment, includ-
ing power tools
◆ Procedures to follow to protect themselves when they work around electricity
◆ Tasks that can only be performed by qualified workers, such as repairs and
maintenance of electrical equipment
Shed some light on electrical safety. Here are some everyday electrical safety
tips that you can share with all employees:
◆ Inspect work areas daily for such hazards as flickering lights, warm cords or
receptacles, sticking switches, burning odors, loose connections, and damaged
wires.
◆ Report any problems to a supervisor immediately.
◆ Leave repairs and adjustments to authorized personnel.
◆ Select proper cords and connectors for each job, and make sure portable
cords are suitable in terms of gauge size, flexibility, strength, and ability to with-
stand chemicals.
◆ Make sure all electrical equipment is properly grounded.
Why it matters …
◆ All fireworks are dangerous—even sparklers, which burn as
hot as 2,000 degrees and can cause severe burns.
◆ Thousands of people of all ages end up in hospital emer-
gency rooms every year because of fireworks accidents.
◆ Almost half of those injured are children, and many others
are bystanders.
◆ Common fireworks injuries include burns to hands, arms,
and face; loss of a finger or hand; and eye injuries that
sometimes result in blindness.
July is National Fireworks Safety Month. Just in time for July 4th, here are some
accident-preventing tips you can share with your employees about fireworks safety.
Why be concerned about employees using fireworks on their own time? Because
every year fireworks cause fires, injuries, and deaths, and you wouldn’t want anything
like that to happen to any of your employees or their families—especially when you
could prevent it with just a few minutes of commonsense training.
Start with the mutilating accidents. Fireworks displays are a traditional way to
mark celebrations during the summer months—especially in July. But when some-
one is injured, a fun celebration quickly turns into a painful memory. Use these
true stories, reported by the U.S. Consumer Products Safety Commission, to drama-
tize the hazards when you talk to employees:
◆ A 52-year-old man lit an artillery shell-type firework with a large fuse. Either he
didn’t move away from it in time, or he came back to check it after it was lit, and
the device exploded in his face. He was rushed to the hospital with first- and
second-degree burns to about 40 percent of his body. He died 3 weeks later.
◆ A 19-year-old girl lit a firework that was supposed to shoot into the air. Instead,
it exploded in her face, shattering the lens of her glasses and burning the skin
around her eye.
Why it matters …
◆ As an employer, you have a responsibility to make sure
your employees are prepared for all kinds of workplace
emergencies.
◆ Employees need to know how to evacuate the workplace
safely as well as carry out any emergency response duties
effectively—both of which require some serious training.
◆ When employees are well prepared to act quickly and safely
in a crisis, they are more likely to survive without injury, and
damage to your facility can be minimized.
Why it matters …
◆ It’s been estimated that 2,000 eye injuries occur in the work-
place every day.
◆ In 10 percent to 20 percent of those injuries, the person
loses some or all sight in one or both eyes.
◆ Safety experts say that 90 percent of all eye injuries can be
prevented.
How many people do you think would say,“I’ve got two eyes—I can afford to lose
one”? Nobody in their right mind! And yet, how many of your employees right this
minute could be taking the risk of losing an eye in a job accident? Maybe more
than you’d like to think. To keep them safe from eye injuries, take advantage of the
fact that October is Eye Injury Prevention Month to work in a little eye safety train-
ing during the next few weeks.
The “Big Three” reasons for eye injuries on the job. The Department of
Labor says that the three most common reasons for workplace eye injuries are:
1. Not being aware of potential eye hazards;
2. Not using eye protection; and
3. Using the wrong type of eye protection for the hazard.
Why it matters …
◆ According to OSHA, workplace fires and explosions kill
hundreds of American workers every year and injure thou-
sands more.
◆ Fires cost businesses billions of dollars a year in property
damage.
◆ Some facilities are destroyed by fire, putting employees out
of work and severely impacting the company’s bottom line.
Not only do your employees need to know how to respond to workplace fires, they
also have to understand how to help prevent them. That’s a lot of information to
communicate about fire safety, and there’s no better time than the present.
Teach workers what to do if fire strikes. All employees should know the
essentials for responding effectively in the event of a fire.
When you hear a fire alarm:
◆ Evacuate immediately using your assigned evacuation route. If that route is
blocked, use your alternate.
◆ Close doors behind you as you leave.
◆ Help others evacuate if you can do so safely.
◆ If you encounter smoke, crawl low under the smoke.
◆ Outside the building, move away from exits. Go directly to your assigned
assembly area and report to the person who is taking a head count.
◆ Remain outside until you are told it is safe to reenter the building.
If you discover a fire:
◆ Activate the nearest fire alarm.
◆ Call 911—don’t assume that someone else has already done this.
◆ Evacuate the building.
If you’re unable to get out of the building:
◆ Create an area of refuge in a room with windows. Use wet cloth to seal cracks
under doors and seal vents against smoke.
◆ Don’t break windows. Open the window just a crack if you need air.
◆ Stay low under smoke, and cover your nose and mouth with a wet cloth.
◆ Signal for help by using a phone or hanging something in the window.
If you expect employees to use fire extinguishers, make sure they’re properly
trained. Make sure they know which extinguisher to use for the different types of
fires:
November—Holiday Safety
Wish your workers a happy and safe holiday
Why it matters …
According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, in one recent year:
◆ More than 37 percent of all motor vehicle fatalities between
Thanksgiving and New Year’s were alcohol-related.
◆ On Christmas Day, that figure jumped to 47.4 percent.
◆ On New Year’s Eve, 45.2 percent of motor vehicle fatalities
were alcohol-related.
The holidays are a joyous time, but to make sure they are also a safe time, take a
few minutes to review some important safety information with your employees.
Why it matters …
◆ It’s a sobering thought that someone dies in an alcohol-
related traffic crash every 30 minutes.
◆ Nearly 600,000 Americans are injured in alcohol-related
traffic crashes each year.
◆ Out of every 10 Americans, three face the possibility of
being directly involved in an alcohol-related traffic crash
at some point in their lives.
◆ Close to 1.5 million people nationwide were arrested in
one recent year for driving under the influence of alcohol
and/or narcotics.
’Tis the season to be jolly—but safe as well. While your employees are enjoy-
ing holiday parties this season, they’d be wise to keep these important facts from
the National Commission Against Drunk Driving in mind:
◆ The three most critical skills necessary for a good, safe driver are judgment,
vision, and reflexes.
◆ Alcohol impairs a driver’s judgment, vision, and reflexes.
◆ An individual’s driving skills can become impaired well before reaching the
legal blood alcohol limit.
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