Tag: OSHA

Heat Illness Prevention Campaign 2012

As the summer months quickly approach, the heat associated with this season is sure to follow. This creates a potentially dangerous hazard for all workers whose services involve working outdoors. However, heat-related illnesses can affect anyone exposed to heat, including those working indoors.

For this reason, Dr. David Michaels hosted a press conference on Monday, May 7th, announcing OSHA’s 2012 Heat Illness Prevention Campaign. This nationwide campaign is being launched to educate workers on the dangers of working in environments with heat hazards. Last year, more than 4,000 workers experienced heat stress or heat illness, and as many as 40 of those cases resulted in death.

Workers at risk of heat stress include firefighters, farmers, construction workers, miners, boiler room workers, factory workers, military, health care, emergency response and cleanup personnel and many more.

The risk of heat stress increases greatly if a worker:

  • Is 65 years of age or older
  • Is overweight
  • Has heart disease or high blood pressure
  • Takes medication(s)

To help ensure the success of this campaign, Dr. Michaels and OSHA have released a list of industry-specific resources and a free “Heat Safety Tool” application available for download on smartphones. The application allows workers and supervisors to calculate the heat index of their workplace environment, displays the risk level associated with that heat index and even provides reminders about protective measures used to reduce the risk associated with heat-related work.

To download the application, visit the OSHA website: http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/heatillness/heat_index/heat_app.html

Resources:
http://www.osha.gov/pls/oshaweb/owadisp.show_document?p_table=NEWS_RELEASES&p_id=22329
http://ohsonline.com/articles/2012/05/07/osha-renews-heat-illness-prevention-campaign.aspx
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/heatstress/industry_resources.html
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/heatstress/

Updated Safety Protocols: NFPA 70E

The establishment of agencies like OSHA and the National Fire Protection Agency (NFPA) have positively impacted workplace fatalities, injuries and illnesses. Over the past 40 years, the overall workplace fatality rate has dropped 60 percent while the occupational injury and illness rates have dropped more than 40 percent. The NFPA, specifically, specializes in reducing the risk of fire and other hazards, including tasks related to electricity.

In an important update, the NFPA published final changes to the 2012 edition of NFPA 70E, which addresses electrical safety-related work practices for employees who may come into contact with “hazards associated with electrical energy during activities such as the installation, inspection, operation, maintenance, and demolition of electric conductors, electric equipment, signaling and communications conductors and equipment, and raceways.”

 The following are just a few of the updates added to the newest edition of the regulation:

  • Basis for retraining
  • Frequency of retraining
  • Selection of qualified persons

These updates are meant to ensure the most qualified employees are performing electrical work. The recent additions to NFPA 70E address that retraining should be conducted when an employee is not complying with safety-related work practices, working in a new environment where the safety-related work practices have changed or if retraining has not been conducted in more than three years. The new edition also encourages employers to use only qualified individuals to complete tasks like testing, troubleshooting and voltage measuring within the Limited Approach Boundary, an approach limit set at a certain distance from an exposed live part where a shock hazard exists.

To ensure current regulations are being implemented and practiced, ISN has updated several requirements within the NFPA 70E safety program protocol. Impacted subscribers will have a 90-day grace period to update and resubmit written safety programs.

For questions regarding NFPA 70E safety program updates or to learn more about ISNetworld, please contact the ISN Customer Service Team at 1 (800) 976-1303. 

Resources:
http://www.nfpa.org/aboutthecodes/AboutTheCodes.asp?DocNum=70E&cookie%5Ftest=1
http://www.iaei.org/magazine/2009/05/occupational-electrical-injury-and-fatality-trends-and-statistics-1992%E2%80%932007/
http://www.nfpa.org/categoryList.asp?categoryID=143&URL=About%20NFPA

Risk Awareness: Hazards in Grain Handling Facilities

There is danger to be found on every worksite, including agricultural facilities. Over the last 35 years there have been more than 180 fatalities and 675 injuries associated with grain dust explosions. To help prevent deadly explosions, OSHA requires grain dust and all ignition sources to be controlled in grain elevators.

Hazardous gases, suffocation and engulfment are also serious concerns for agricultural workers. OSHA advises grain workers to minimize their exposure to harmful gas emitted from either spoiling grain or fumigation (pesticides).

Exposure to harmful fumigants can cause:

  • Permanent central nervous system damage
  • Heart and vascular disease
  • Lung edema
  • Cancer

 A documented trend, suffocation by engulfment is one of the leading causes of death in grain bin-related accidents. In 2010, 51 workers were engulfed inside grain bins; 26 of these workers died.

OSHA offers several best practices when entering grain storage bins:

  • Turn off and lock out all powered equipment to prevent grain flow
  • Prohibit walking down grain and similar actions used to increase grain flow
  • Provide the proper personal protective equipment
  • Appoint an observer to be stationed outside the grain bin
  • Test the air inside the bin for hazardous gases and ensure sufficient oxygen levels
  • Obtain a permit certifying the proper steps have been taken to ensure a safe work environment

Additional resources and a fact sheet on preventing grain bin incidents can be found below.

Resources:
http://www.osha.gov/asst-sec/Grain-Letter-2-1-2011.html
http://www.osha.gov/Publications/grainstorageFACTSHEET.pdf
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/grainhandling/index.html
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/grainhandling/explosionchart.html
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/grainhandling/hazard_alert.html

2011 ISN Annual Users Conference: Speaker Edwin G. Foulke, Jr.

Welcome to ISN’s 2011 Annual Users Conference.  One of our speakers, Ed Foulke, highlights many important safety topics in his presentation, entitled“13 Ways to Improve Your Safety Program While Increasing Your Productivity and Profitability”. 

Mr. Foulke discusses the importance of prioritizing safety and health in your company.  He says that it is not only the right thing to do, but allows employees to go home each night safely, is legally required, and essential for a company to be profitable and competitive in today’s marketplace.  He goes on to share the penalties paid by companies who violate acceptable health and safety protocols. 

Mr. Foulke shares 13 ways that companies can improve their safety programs while still increasing productivity and profitability:

  1.  Determine Your Vulnerability Under OSHA’s New Priorities
  2. Audit Your Company’s OSHA Recordkeeping
  3. Audit Your Workplace for Routine Violations
  4. Review Abatement of All Past OSHA Citations
  5. Prepare for OSHA’s Revised Approach to Ergonomics Enforcement
  6. Use Job Safety Analysis to Focus Workplace Safety and Health Strategy
  7. Make Safety the #1 Goal from the Floor to the “C” Suite
  8. Utilize Safety as a Profit Center
  9. Develop Emergency Action Plans to Deal with the Inevitable
  10. Protect Company’s Wellness Plan from Potential Liability
  11. Understand Implications of OSHA’s Multi-Employer Citation Policy
  12. Avoid Membership in OSHA’s Severe Violators Enforcement Program
  13. Solve Other Problems by Solving Safety Problems

By keeping employee safety and health as your company’s priority, you ensure your safety programs are continuously improving, resulting in more time to focus on productivity and the growth of your company.

Mitigating Risk by Making Informed Hiring Decisions

Risk is a normal part of doing business. The risk organizations face is compounded when companies hire contractors to perform work rather than using their own internal employees. Organizations increase their risk even more when there is not a standardized and consistent method for evaluating contractor health, safety, and procurement information. Managing risk is the most important task while assessing the safety and viability of a contractor.  The safest hiring decision is made when a company is able to gather all appropriate data and synthesize it into a usable format.  Although risk may not be completely eliminated, it can be effectively managed.

The decision making processes involved in contractor management are only as good as the tools used to gather and analyze the data.  The use of third party software and other tools are invaluable to any company looking to hire and retain safe and qualified contractors in a high risk environment.

There are two major considerations when managing contractors. First is deciding on the criteria for evaluation and second is developing an effective management process to evaluate this criteria. 

Historical data, or lagging indicators, is taken into account when evaluating a contractor because past safety performance is assumed to be indicative of future performance. These key performance indicators can include the contractor’s fatality rate, their total recordable incident rate or total recordable frequency (TRIR/TRF), as well as insurance indicators with an experience modification rate (EMR) or their Worker’s Compensation rate.

Improving safety performance is what the ongoing monitoring and evaluation of a contractor’s safety data is all about.  These leading indicators can include safety and training programs, on-the-job and post job evaluations and audits. Ensuring that contractors are developing and maintaining safety programs and policies that can adequately prepare them for potential hazards is crucial in determining whether or not a contractor is dedicated to safe work practices.  Training employees on these safety programs is also a necessity to ensure they translate these programs into their work environment.    

By having a standardized contractor prequalification process in place, followed by performance monitoring and evaluating, Owner Clients are able to decrease exposure to high risk situations by making better hiring decisions.  In turn, contractors and Owner Clients alike are striving to create safer work environments.

For more information on managing risk, click here.