Boosting Employee Safety and Avoiding OSHA Citations
Although it’s
impossible for employers to mitigate against every conceivable hazard in the
workplace, there are five critical steps that every employer should take to
improve safety in the workplace—and avoid costly OSHA citations.
●
Conduct
an Internal Safety and Health Audit
One of the
most effective ways for an employer to identify and eliminate safety hazards in
the workplace is to conduct a safety and health audit. Employers should closely
examine every aspect of their workplace to ensure they’re in full compliance
with OSHA standards and best practices.
Employers
must take care, though, in the way they conduct and document such audits.
In an
inspection, OSHA may demand to see audit reports and use them to identify
potential hazards in the workplace, essentially using the employer’s proactive
audit against it and issuing citations based on hazards identified but not yet
remedied.
Employers
can protect their internal audit reports from disclosure to OSHA by working
with counsel in conducting their audits. The audit report is then protected
from disclosure to OSHA by the attorney-client communication privilege.
●
Create
a Strong Safety Culture
A robust
and authentic safety culture is critical for ensuring employee health and
safety. Management at all levels should be involved in creating this culture,
actively communicating with employees and being physically present where
employees do their jobs. Such actions demonstrate to employees that employers
are serious about safety, increasing employees’ commitment to safety and their
overall job satisfaction. By doing this, employers have the opportunity to
observe potential hazards with their own eyes and discover other potential
hazards through conversations with employees.
Employers
should assure employees that safety is a priority and that suggestions for
improving safety in the workplace are not only welcome, but encouraged. By
providing open lines of communication with employees, employers again encourage
a commitment to safety at all levels of the organization and significantly
improve the odds they will learn of a potential problem.
Employees
are often the first to identify a potential hazard, and having regularly worked
in a particular area, they have insightful suggestions about how problems can
best be resolved. When an employee identifies a potential hazard, the employer
should assess the situation promptly and respond to the issue in a timely
manner.
●
Ensure
That Safety and Health Documentation Is Current and Well Communicated
All
employers must provide to their employees essential safety information, such as
how to evacuate in an emergency. OSHA also requires employers to provide a
range of written guidance to employees regarding the essentials of safely
performing their work.
Every
employer should regularly review its OSHA documentation requirements, which may
change from time to time. Recently, for example, OSHA updated the Hazard
Communication Standard to align with the GHS. Having determined the extent of
their documentation requirements, employers should review their documents and
ensure that they are thorough and up to date. Finally, employers should make
sure that employees fully comprehend the documentation, know how and when to
use it, and understand the reason for maintaining it. This helps to ensure
employee safety and gives employees another opportunity to provide suggestions
and point out information that’s missing from the documents.
●
Train
Employees in Safety and Health, Regularly and Comprehensively
OSHA standards
include a number of training requirements. OSHA often cites employers for
failure to train employees on relevant safety and health information and
failure to ensure that employees understand the training. This is avoidable.
Employers
must provide comprehensive training to employees in a way that employees can
fully comprehend. A simple way to ensure compliance with this requirement is to
administer a quiz at the conclusion of the training, requiring employees to
demonstrate their comprehension of the information that was relayed to them.
Many employers require employees to achieve a high score on such quizzes (e.g.,
90 to 100 percent). If employees are unable to reach the required score on the
first try, they should be given the opportunity to be retrained and take the
quiz again. Employers should keep records of all safety and health training
provided to employees and should keep quizzes and other related materials on
file. Simply being able to provide these documents to OSHA in the event of an inspection
will go a long way toward proving that the employer has complied with OSHA’s
training requirements.
●
Protect
Contractors and Temporary Workers, Too
Employers
should make every effort to ensure that all employees working in their
facilities are safe – contractors and temporary workers included. Many tragic
incidents can be avoided by ensuring that everyone is on the same page when it
comes to safety. Although this task may sound daunting, it is another essential
element of creating a truly safe working environment.
OSHA has
instructed its compliance officers to expand the scope of inspections to
include temporary workers who may have been exposed to a hazard identified by
OSHA. This instruction led to a 322 percent increase in inspections involving
temporary employees in 2014. In only 15 percent of those inspections, citations
were issued to the temporary agencies—but countless citations were issued to
host employers, often for failing to train temporary workers properly or to
provide them with the safety gear provided to permanent employees, leaving
temporary workers at an increased risk of harm.
(EBGL
website)
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