“osha updates” - american industrial hygiene association · “osha updates” peter barletta...
TRANSCRIPT
February 8, 2017
“OSHA Updates”
Peter Barletta CAS, CSP
OSHA Braintree Office
617-565-6924
Region 1 OSHA Offices Bangor
Augusta
Braintree
Boston
Providence Hartford
Bridgeport
Springfield
Andover
Concord
Montpelier *
*State Plan
New rule on Walking-Working Surfaces and Personal Fall Protection Systems
Electronic Reporting
Beryllium and Beryllium Compounds
The National Fall Prevention Stand-Down
Recommended Practices for Ant-Retaliation Programs- Whistle Blower Guidance
OSHA’s Safety and Health Program Recommended Practices
Outline of Key OSHA Topics
New Penalty System
New Walking-Working Surfaces and PPE (Fall Protection) Rule
Effective date: This final rule became effective on January 17, 2017
General Industry 29 CFR Part 1910 subparts D and I
Purpose of the New Rule
• To update the outdated subpart D standard, incorporating new technology and industry practices
• To increase consistency with OSHA’s construction standards (CFR 1926 subparts L, M, and X)
• To add new provisions to subpart I that set forth criteria requirements for personal fall protection equipment
Who is Affected?
• OSHA estimates 6.9 million general industry establishments employing 112.3 million workers will be affected
Benefits • According to BLS data, slips, trips, and falls are
a leading cause of workplace fatalities and injuries in general industry
• OSHA estimates the new rule will prevent 29 fatalities and 5,842 injuries annually
• Net benefits - $309.5 million/year (Monetized benefits – annual costs)
The Most Serious Workplace Injuries Cost U.S. Companies $59.9 Billion Per Year, According to 2017 Liberty Mutual Workplace Safety Index
The top three causes – which collectively represent almost half of the cost of the leading accidents – are overexertion ($13.8 billion, 23 percent), falls on same level ($10.6 billion, 17.7 percent) and falls to lower level ($5.5 billion, 9.2 percent
Statistics from BOSTON--(BUSINESS WIRE)--
Massachusetts | 55 | 69 | 1.7 | 2.1
2014 | 2015 | 2014 | 2015
Fatal Counts | Fatal Rates
BLS Fatal occupational injuries counts and rates by state of incident, 2014-15
2015
Total fatal injuries
Event or exposure(1) 2015
Violence and other injuries by persons or animals
Transpor- tation incidents
Fires and explosions
Falls, slips, trips
Exposure to harmful substances or environments
Contact with objects and equipment
69 10 26 2 17 8 6
10/1/15-9/30/2016 -19
Fall
Lynn CIB
Georgetown
Fall
Somerville
Fall
Watertown Other
Maynard
Struck By
Dorchester
CIB
Boston
Struck By
Norton
Fall
Boston
Other
Boston
CIB
South Easton
Fall
Leominster
Fall
Sutton Struck By
East Longmeadow
Other
Holden
Fall
Worcester
Struck By
Whitinsville
CIB
Philipston
10/1/14-9/30/2015 - 22
Struck By
Peabody
Struck By
Medford
Other
Somerville
Struck By
Littleton
Struck By
Malden
Fall
Hudson
Other
Revere
Fall
Peabody
Struck By
New Bedford
Fall
Jamaica Plain
Struck By
Boston
Fall
Boston
Fall
Taunton
Fall
Boston
Fall
Taunton
Struck By
Braintree
CIB
Westfield
CIB
Berlin
Struck By
Auburn
Struck By
Holyoke
Other
Longmeadow
Fall
Spencer
Other
Andover
CIB
Cambridge
Other
Billerica
Struck By
Boxford
Fall
Framingham
Fall
Somerville
CIB
Boston
Struck By
Boston
CIB
New Bedford
Fall
Boston
CIB
Boston
Fall
Nantucket
Other
Bourne
Fall
Boston
Fall
Stockbridge Struck By
Ware
10/1/13-9/30/2014 -16
Oct through Sept - 10
Struck
Haverhill
Fall
Ayer
Other
Cambridge
CIB
Cambridge
Other
Lynn
Other
Malden
Other
Medford
Electrical
Holliston
Struck By
Avon
CIB
Plymouth
Oct through Sept - 15
Struck
Williamstown
Fall
Hampden
Other
Milton
Electrical
Douglas
Fall
Newton
Struck
Marshfield
CIB
Lancaster
Struck
Lynn
CIB
Taunton Fall
West
Springfield
CIB
Quincy
Fall
Cambridge
Fall
Sudbury
Fall
Springfield
Fall
Lynnfield
Oct through Sept - 20
Electric
Fitchburg
Fall
Cohasset
Struck
Brockton
Other
Chelmsford
CIB
Seekonk
Fall
Harwich
2-Fall
Boston
2- Other
J Plain/Hyde
Park
CIB
Northborough
Other
Weymouth
Fall
Taunton
Struck
Northfield
Other
Norfolk Electric
Marlborough
Fall
South
Deerfield
Fall
Springfield
Other
Lakeville
Fall
Methuen
09/29/09 - 23
Struck
Worcester
Struck
Westford
CIB
Plymouth
Fall
Lowell
2-Fall
Waltham
Electric
Stow
Fall
Cohasset
Fall
Fairhaven
Struck
Boston
Fall
Deerfield
Fall
Boston
Other
South Hadley
Struck
Chelsea
Other
New Bedford
CIB
Fall River
CIB
Boston
CIB
Halifax
CIB
Salisbury
3- Other
Salem
09/30/2008 / 24
Fall
Wakefield
Struck
Worcester
Electric
North
Plymouth
Electric
North
Lowell
Other
Assonet
Fall
Pocasset
Other
Springfield
Fall
Cambridge
Struck
Peabody
2-CIB
Worcester
Other
Palmer
Other
Falmouth
Fall
No Andover
Struck
Lawrence
Fall
Bradford
Fall
East Boston
Electric
Haverhill
Struck
Quincy
Electric
Walpole
Fall
Seekonk
Other
Lynn
CIB
Springfield
Electric
Newton
Other
New Bedford
Other
Cambridge
10/12/2007 / 23
Fall
Boston
Fall
Brookline
Fall
Medfield
CIB
Hyannis
Struck
Wakefield
Fall
Lowell
Fall
Woburn
CIB
Amherst
Struck
Melrose
Struck
Revere
Fall
Marlboro
Struck
Brockton
Struck
Hingham
Electric
North
Attleboro
Electric
Marshfield
Fall
Salem
Other
Boston
HVAC worker dies after fall from cinema roof in Millbury
Note From BLS 2015 Statistics: Seventeen percent of decedents were contracted by and performing work for another business or government entity in 2015 rather than for their direct employer at the time of the incident.
A heating/ventilation/air conditioning worker died Tuesday afternoon after falling 30 to 35 feet off the Blackstone Valley Cinema De Lux at the Shoppes at Blackstone Valley.
Recent Fatal Fall - Massachusetts Performing Contract Work – January 2017
Contractor dies in fall from power plant roof Delmarva Now (Salisbury, Md.) January 31, 2017 "The employer under investigation is MPW Industrial Services Inc., an industrial cleaning contractor working for NRG Indian River to clean the fly ash silo,"
Police said a male subject fell from a roof of the power plant on 29416 Power Plant Road and died as a result of the fall.
Top Ten Violations
Most frequently cited OSHA standards during FY 2016
inspections
We Can Help www.osha.gov
1. Fall Protection
2. Hazard Communication
3. Scaffolding
4. Respiratory Protection
5. Lockout/Tagout
6. Powered Industrial Trucks
7. Ladders
8. Machine Guarding
9. Electrical – Wiring Methods
10. Electrical – General Requirements
Top Ten Violations in Construction FY 2016 1. Fall Protection, Duty to Have (1926.501)
2. Scaffolding (1926.451)
3. Ladders (1926.1053)
4. Fall Protection, Training (1926.503)
5. Eye and Face Protection (1926.102)
6. Hazard Communication (1910.1200)
7. Head Protection (1926.100)
8. General Safety and Health Provisions (1926.20)
9. Aerial Lifts (1926.453)
10. Fall Protection, Systems Criteria and Practices (1926.502)
Organization of Subpart D §1910.21 – Scope, Application and Definitions
§1910.22 – General Requirements
§1910.23 – Ladders
§1910.24 – Stepbolts and Manhole Steps
§1910.25 – Stairways
§1910.26 – Dockboards
§1910.27 – Scaffolds and Rope Descent Systems
§1910.28 – Duty to Have Fall Protection
§1910.29 – Fall Protection Systems Criteria and Practices
§1910.30 –Training Requirements
§1910.21
§1910.21 – Scope and definitions
• Consolidates definitions into one section
• Adds new definitions to provide clarity
§1910.22
§1910.22 – General Requirements
• Maintains housekeeping provisions
• Walking-working surfaces must be designed to meet their maximum intended load, free of recognized hazards, and routinely inspected
• Repairs to be done, or overseen, by competent person
§1910.23
Fixed Ladders
Portable
Ladders and Step Stools
§1910.23 – Ladders.
• Consolidates and simplifies rules into general requirements, portable ladders, fixed ladders, and mobile ladder stands
• Requires inspection before use
§1910.23 (cont) • Updates and makes rule
consistent with current national consensus standards
Mobile Ladder Stand
Mobile Ladder Stand Platform
§1910.24 – Stepbolts and manhole steps
• Moves stepbolt criteria from OSHA’s Telecommunication Standard to Walking-Working Surfaces
• Makes design, inspection, and maintenance requirements consistent with national consensus standards
§1910.24
Step bolts on pole
§1910.26 §1910.26 – Dockboards
• Updates requirements for dockboards
• Adds design and construction requirements to prevent equipment from going over the dockboard edge
§1910.27 §1910.27 – Scaffolds and Rope Descent Systems
(RDS)
• Requires that employers using scaffolds follow the construction standard
• Adds provision allowing use of RDS, which codifies a 1991 OSHA memo allowing RDS
• Requires certification of anchorages starting 1 year after final rule published
• Requires RDS have separate fall arrest system
Rope Descent Systems
§1910.28
§1910.28 – Duty to have fall protection and falling object protection
• Consolidates general industry fall protection requirements into one section
• Makes requirements and format consistent with construction standard
• Incorporates new technology that is consistent with national consensus standards
• Gives employers flexibility to use the system that works best to protect workers in their situation
§1910.28 Duty to have fall protection . (b) Protection from fall hazards--(1) Unprotected sides and edges. (i) Except as provided elsewhere in this section, the employer must ensure that each employee on a walking-working surface with an unprotected side or edge that is 4 feet (1.2 m) or more above a lower level is protected from falling by one or more of the following: • Guardrail systems; • Safety net systems; or • Personal fall protection systems, such as personal fall
arrest, travel restraint, or positioning systems.
§1910.28
Dangerous equipment. The employer must ensure: Each employee less than 4 feet (1.2 m) above dangerous equipment is protected from falling into or onto the dangerous equipment by a guardrail system or a travel restraint system, unless the equipment is covered or guarded to eliminate the hazard.
§1910.28
For fixed ladders that extend more than 24 feet (7.3 m) above a lower level, the employer must ensure: • Existing fixed ladders installed before November 19, 2018 is
equipped with a personal fall arrest system, ladder safety system, cage, or well;
• New fixed ladders. Each fixed ladder installed on and after November 19, 2018, is equipped with a personal fall arrest system or a ladder safety system;
• Replacement. When a fixed ladder, cage, or well, or any portion of a section thereof, is replaced, a personal fall arrest system or ladder safety system is installed in at least that section of the fixed ladder, cage, or well where the replacement is located;
• On and after November 18, 2036, all fixed ladders are equipped with a personal fall arrest system or a ladder safety system.
§1910.28
Work on low-slope roofs, when work is performed less than 6 feet (1.6 m) from the roof edge. The employer must ensure each employee is protected from falling by a guardrail system, safety net system, travel restraint system, or personal fall arrest system.
§1910.28
Work on low-slope roofs, when work is performed at least 6 feet (1.6 m) but less than 15 feet (4.6 m) from the roof edge. The employer must ensure each employee is protected from falling by using a guardrail system, safety net system, travel restraint system, or personal fall arrest system. The employer may use a designated area when performing work that is both infrequent and temporary.
§1910.28
When work is performed 15 feet (4.6 m) or more from the roof edge. • The employer must protect each employee from falling
by a guardrail system, safety net system, travel restraint system, or personal fall arrest system or a designated area.
• The employer is not required to provide any fall protection, provided the work is both infrequent and temporary; and Implement and enforce a work rule prohibiting employees from going within 15 feet (4.6 m) of the roof edge without using fall protection in accordance with paragraphs (b)(13)(i) and (ii) of this section. *Note all workers need to be trained and a fall protection plan developed and implemented.
§1910.28
Walking-working surfaces not otherwise addressed. Except as provided elsewhere in this section or by other subparts of this part, the employer must ensure each employee on a walking-working surface 4 feet (1.2 m) or more above a lower level is protected from falling by:
• Guardrail systems; • Safety net systems; or • Personal fall protection systems, such as
personal fall arrest, travel restraint, or positioning systems
§1910.28
§1910.29
• Guardrails
• Stair rails
• Designated areas
• Safety nets
• Covers
• Cages and wells
• Ladder safety systems
• Toeboards
§1910.29 – Fall protection systems criteria Specifies design and installation requirements of
each fall protection system available to
employers including:
§1910.30
§1910.30 – Training
• Adds training and retraining requirements addressing fall hazards and equipment hazards
• Requires employers make training understandable to workers
§1910.30 Training requirements. (a) Fall hazards. (1) Before any employee is exposed to a fall hazard, the employer must provide training for each employee who uses personal fall protection systems or who is required to be trained as specified elsewhere in this subpart. Employers must ensure employees are trained in the requirements of this paragraph on or before May 17, 2017.
• The employer must ensure that each employee is trained by a qualified person.
• The employer must train each employee in at least the following topics:
(1) The nature of the fall hazards in the work area and how to recognize them; (2) The procedures to be followed to minimize those hazards; (3) The correct procedures for installing, inspecting, operating, maintaining, and disassembling the personal fall protection systems. (4) The correct use of personal fall protection systems and equipment, including, but not limited to, proper hook-up, anchoring, and tie-off techniques, and methods of equipment inspection and storage, as specified by the manufacturer
Fall Protection Training New General Industry Standard
Fall Protection Retraining. §1910.30 The employer must retrain an employee when the employer has reason to believe the employee does not have the understanding and skills required. Situations requiring retraining include, but are not limited to, the following: • When changes in the workplace render previous training
obsolete or inadequate.
• When changes in the types of fall protection systems or equipment to be used rendered obsolete or inadequate.
• When inadequacies in an affected employee's knowledge or
use of fall protection systems or equipment.
§1910.140
§1910.140 – Personal Protective Equipment (Personal Fall Protection Systems)
• Adds definitions for personal fall protection systems
• Adds new section on system and use criteria for:
• Personal fall protection equipment (e.g., lanyards, ropes, D-rings, harnesses)
• Personal fall arrest systems
• Travel restraint systems
• Work positioning systems
Personal Fall Protection
Travel Restraint
Personal Fall Arrest
Work Positioning
Summary of Major Changes • Fall Protection Flexibility
• Updated Scaffold Requirements (aligned with construction)
• Phase-in of ladder safety systems or personal fall arrest systems on fixed ladders
• Phase-out of “qualified climbers” on outdoor advertising structures
• Rope descent systems-window washers
• Adds requirements for personal fall protection equipment system performance and use requirements (final §1910.140)
• Inspection of walking-working surfaces
• Adds training requirements
• Prompt rescue of each employee in the event of a fall.
Main Effective Dates • Rule overall: January 17, 2017
• Training: 6 months after publication
• Building anchorages for RDS: 1 year after publication
• Fixed ladder fall protection: 2 years after publication
• Installation of ladder safety system or personal fall arrest system on fixed ladders: 20 years after publication
Compliance Assistance Resources • OSHA’s new webpage on subparts D&I:
www.osha.gov/walking-working-surfaces/index.html
• Fact sheets
• FAQs
Fatalities caused by falls from elevation continue to be a leading cause of death for construction workers, accounting for 350 of the 937 construction fatalities recorded in 2015 (BLS data). Those deaths were preventable. The National Fall Prevention Stand-Down raises fall hazard awareness across the country in an effort to stop fall fatalities and injuries
Beryllium: The Department of Labor (DOL) is delaying new workplace safety standards to comply with President Trump’s regulatory moratorium. The Labor Department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued new rules to protect workers from exposure to beryllium on Jan. 9, but is now delaying the standards. The beryllium standards will now go into effect on March 21, 2017. The rule contains standards for general industry, construction, and shipyards.
Key Provisions • Reduces the (PEL) for beryllium to 0.2 micrograms per cubic
meter of air, averaged over 8-hours. • Establishes a new short term exposure limit for beryllium of 2.0
micrograms per cubic meter of air, over a 15-minute sampling period.
• Requires employers to: use engineering and work practice controls (such as ventilation or enclosure) to limit worker exposure to beryllium; provide respirators when controls cannot adequately limit exposure; limit worker access to high-exposure areas; develop a written exposure control plan; and train workers on beryllium hazards.
• Requires employers to make available medical exams to monitor exposed workers and provides medical removal protection benefits to workers identified with a beryllium-related disease
Beryllium and Beryllium Compounds
Improve Tracking Of Workplace Injuries and Illnesses
Provisions call for employers to electronically submit injury and illness data that they already record.
Timeline • Final Rule Federal Register Notice – May 12, 2016
• Employee Rights effective date – August 10, 2016 December 2, 2016
• Electronic Reporting effective Date – January 1, 2017
• Phase-in data submission due dates
Submission
year
Establishments with 250 or
more employees in industries
covered by the recordkeeping
rule
Establishments with
20-249 employees In
select industries
Submission
deadline
2017 CY 2016 300A Form CY 2016 300A Form July 1, 2017
2018 CY 2017 300A, 300, 301 Forms CY 2017 300A Form July 1, 2018
2019 and
beyond
300A, 300, 301 Forms 300A Form March 2
Electronic Reporting
• 1904.41(a)(1) – Establishments with 250 or
more employees in industries covered by the
recordkeeping rule:
– Must, on an annual basis, provide data from the:
• Summary Form 300A
• Log Form 300
• Incident Report 301
– Does not include the injured worker’s name and address
– Does not include the physician’s name and address
Electronic Reporting
• 1904.41(a)(2) – Establishments with 20 to 249
employees in certain industries:
– Must provide, on an annual basis, data from the
Summary Form 300A
• This replaces the ODI
Electronic Reporting
• 1904.41(a)(2) covered High Hazard Industries for 20-249 employees
– Ag., forestry and fishing (NAICS 11)
– Utilities (NAICS 22)
– Construction (NAICS 23)
– Manufacturing (NAICS 31-33)
– Wholesale Trade (NAICS 42)
– Industry groups (4-digit NAICS) with a three year average DART
rate of 2.0 or greater in the Retail, Transportation, Information,
Finance, Real Estate and Service sectors.
Improve Tracking of Workplace Injuries and
Illnesses: Final rule
• The rule does not add to or change any
employer’s obligation to complete and retain
the injury and illness records or change the
recording criteria or definitions for these
records. The rule only modifies employers’
obligations to transmit information from these
records to OSHA.
How: OSHA will provide a secure website that offers three options for data submission. • First, users will be able to manually enter data into a
web form.
• Second, users will be able to upload a CSV file to process single or multiple establishments at the same time.
• Last, users of automated recordkeeping systems will have the ability to transmit data electronically via an API (application programming interface). We will provide status updates and related information here as it becomes available
Employee Rights
• Modifications to 1904.35 make it a violation for an employer
to discourage employee reporting of injuries and illnesses.
• Employers must inform employees of their right to report
work-related injuries and illnesses free from retaliation. This
obligation may be met by posting the OSHA “It’s The Law”
worker rights poster v. April 2015 or later.
• Raise a safety or health concern with your employer or OSHA,
or report a work-related injury or illness, without being
retaliated against.
• This rule does not ban incentive programs. However,
employers must not create incentive programs that deter or
discourage an employee from reporting an injury or illness.
Incentive programs should encourage safe work practices and
promote worker participation in safety-related activities.
• The rule does not ban drug testing of employees. It only bans
employers from using drug testing, or the threat of drug
testing, as a form of retaliation against employees who report
injuries or illnesses. In addition, employers cannot create drug
testing policies or practices that deter or discourage an
employee from reporting an injury or illness.
Outreach Materials
• Improve Tracking Webpage at http://www.osha.gov/recordkeeping/finalrule/index.html
– Link to Rule
– FAQs
– Fact sheet
– Press release
– List of covered industries
The document outlines five key elements of an effective anti-retaliation program: 1. Management leadership, commitment, and
accountability 2. System for listening to and resolving
employees' safety and compliance concerns 3. System for receiving and responding to
reports of retaliation 4. Anti-retaliation training for employees and
managers 5. Program oversight
OSHA’S Whistleblower Webpage
www.whistleblowers.gov
Report a Fatality or Severe Injury • All employers are required to notify OSHA when an
employee is killed on the job or suffers a work-related hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye.
• A fatality must be reported within 8 hours. • An in-patient hospitalization, amputation, or eye loss must
be reported within 24 hours
10,388 severe injuries reported, including
2,644 amputations and 7,636 hospitalizations
This is an average of 30 worker injuries every day of the year
Most reported injuries (62%) were addressed by employer investigation, not OSHA inspection
Severe Injury Reporting:
YEAR ONE FINDINGS
Higher OSHA Penalties
OSHA has increased its civil monetary penalties to account for inflation
Congress required OSHA and other agencies to increase their penalties
First time OSHA’s penalties will be adjusted since 1990
Increased penalties will help deter bad employers; will encourage them to do the right thing
Higher OSHA Penalties
• OSHA's maximum penalties increased by 78%.
• Going forward, the agency will continue to adjust its penalties for inflation each year based on the Consumer Price Index.
• The new penalties took effect August 1, 2016. Citations issued by OSHA after that date will be subject to the new penalties if the related violations occurred after November 2, 2015.
New Penalty Levels
Type of Violation Current Maximum New Maximum*
Serious and Other-Than-Serious
Posting Requirements
$7,000 per violation
$12,471 per violation
Willful or Repeated
$70,000 per violation
$124,709 per violation
Failure to Abate
$7,000 per day
beyond the abatement date
$12,471 per day
beyond the abatement date
*Maximum penalties will be readjusted annually for inflation.
Adjustments to Penalties
• To provide guidance to field staff, OSHA issued revisions to its Field Operations Manual.
• To address the impact on smaller businesses, OSHA will continue to provide penalty reductions based on the size of the employer and other factors.
The employee was working at John’s Used Autos and Parts LLC when he was struck in the head by a chain come-a-long device as he attempted to inflate and mount a multi-piece rim wheel on a vehicle on Oct. 31, 2016
Recent Fatality Case Under New Penalty System
Specifically, the employer did not: • Train and instruct the employees in correct and safe
operating procedures for servicing multi-piece rim wheels.
• Establish safe operating procedures. • Provide a restraining device for employees to use
when inflating the tire.
The inspection also identified violations concerning lack of exit route signage, personal protective equipment, forklift training, electrical safety and training about hazardous chemicals in the workplace. Finally, the employer did not notify OSHA of the employee’s death as required.
As a result of these conditions, OSHA cited John’s Used Autos and Parts for 12 serious violations of workplace safety standards. Proposed penalties total $27,157. John’s Used Autos and Parts has 15 business days from receipt of the citations and proposed penalties to comply, meet with OSHA’s area director, or contest the findings before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission. Note: small employer with less than 10 employees
Total Issued Penalties for Fatal Case
Bringing OSH into the 21st Century
• National Safety Congress • October 18, 2017
Dr. David Michaels
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational
Safety and Health
Recommended Practices for Safety and Health Programs and Beyond
Safety and Health Programs Work
Safety and Health Programs – Key Concepts
• Commitment and leadership from the top
• Safety and health is as important to business
success as quality, productivity, profitability or
customer satisfaction
• Engage workers in finding solutions, leading to
• Reduced cost, disruption, and administrative time
• Improved morale, loyalty, and retention
• Enhanced productivity, quality and competitiveness
• Find and fix hazards in the workplace
• Before they can cause injuries and illnesses
OSHA’s Safety and Health Program Recommended Practices
• Updated and redesigned
• To reflect changes in the economy such as increased use of
temporary and contract workers
• Voluntary
• Not enforceable, but will help
with compliance
• Flexible
• Work at your own pace and adapt
to your workplace
• Separate recommended practices
for construction
OSHA’s Safety and Health Program Recommended Practices
1. Management leadership
2. Worker participation
3. Hazard identification and
assessment
4. Hazard prevention and control
5. Education and training
6. Program evaluation and
improvement
7. Communication and
coordination for host
employers, contractors and
staffing agencies
Recommended Practices Website
osha.gov/shpguidelines
Tools and Resources • Case Studies
• Additional Resources
• Covering every core element and a dozen more topics
• SHP Self-Evaluation Tool
• Coming soon
• SHP Model Program Generator
• Coming soon
• Program implementation
• Policy and leadership
• Model programs
• Goals and metrics
• Reporting
• Incident investigation
• Emergency planning and response
• Program certification, registration and recognition
• Safety certifications
• Safety handbooks
• Standards
OSHA’s Safety and Health Program Campaign
• A companion effort to promote SHPs broadly
• Partnerships => leverage => reach
• EVERY business and workplace needs an SHP
• Many valid approaches: choose one
• Recommended Practices (2016)
• Journey to Safety Excellence
• VPP
• OHSAS 18001
• ANSI Z10
• ISO 45001
New Campaign Logo
Campaign Website
osha.gov/shpcampaign
MA Department of Labor Standards
OSHA Consultation Program
Wall Experiment Station
37 Shattuck Street
Lawrence, MA 01843
phone: 617-626-6504
fax: 978-687-0013
email: [email protected]
On-site Consultation
Free
Working Together, We Can Help
www.osha.gov
800-321-OSHA (6742)