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Top Ten OSHA Fines For Small Businesses

A common misconception about people who own a small business or work as independent contractors, there is no need to have a safety program. Many of them operate under this assumption because they have very few employees. Every year, OSHA releases its list of top citations and cost per inspection. By looking at the list from 2007, you can see just how important safety programs can be to a small business. It is not only important, it is the law.

  1. Hazard Communication: This is a very important topic, detrimental to the health and welfare of your workers. By law, you must have a complete list of all hazardous materials used on your job site. This is called a Material Safety Data Sheet, or MSDS for short. This list must be posted in a location where it is accessible to all employees. Employees must also be safety trained on how to use personal protection equipment. Violations of this nature are just one of the many reasons why companies are fined.
  2. Training: Your employees must be properly trained, but sadly this is not the case for many companies. Employees need to know how to do their job properly; tool safety, operating equipment, and how to use personal protective gear, along with many other things, are all important job requirements. When you hire an employee, by ensuring they are properly trained it saves you time and money.
  3. Training Requirements: In any industry, properly trained employees are essential to the health and welfare of your employees, as well as to how effectively a business operates. Have a regular schedule for safety training meetings, and train each employee according to their job function. Each employee should receive training in fall prevention, handling hazardous materials, proper equipment required, using respirators, and having a Material Safety Data Sheet on each job site. OSHA has outlined the guidelines that dictate safety training in their manuals.
  4. Head Protection: Protecting your head is important and you should always wear a hard hat on the job site. There could be any number of materials flying through the air at any time, or you could simply walk into something and injure yourself. Workers not observing the hard hat rules will be fined and cited for a violation, this will cost your company money.
  5. Wiring Design and Protection: OSHA guidelines dictate that an employer must have either a ground fault interrupter (GFI) or assured equipment grounding conductor program. Ground fault electrical shock is a very real and common hazard on construction sites. Unsafe or improperly installed electrical equipment being used, improperly trained workers, or environmental conditions causing an unsafe work environment all factor into causing electrical accidents.
  6. Ladders: You should never use a ladder that is damaged, rickety, missing rungs or unstable in any way. However, many workers in reality do not think about this on the job site. By law, you are not allowed to do any “work”, from a ladder. You are only allowed to use a ladder to get from the ground to a higher height and back down again. You need to be trained and observe the rules, to protect yourself.
  7. Aerial Lifts: In the job place, you may be tempted to take shortcuts to save time. This is never a good idea when you think about all the consequences that can likely occur when you disregard personal safety. Only people who are trained and qualified should be doing hoisting and lifting responsibilities. You are required to work wearing hoisting gear that involves ropes, hooks, hook balls and blocks, netting, slings, cradles, shackles and various other items. Before you attempt to begin any lifting operations, you must hold a safety meeting and make sure each worker understands and has reviewed the “Lift Plan”. This would be a detailed plan outlining the entire process, as well as providing a visual guide for what can be expected to happen.
  8. Fall Protection: The issue of fall protection is something that OSHA (as well as responsible employers) takes very seriously. Fines and citations may spring from a variety of issues. Working with heights can be a very dangerous and scary proposition. Failing to properly install or construct safety equipment, improperly trained employees and unsafe work practices, all combine for some of the main reasons a business can be penalized.
  9. Specific Excavation Requirements: Things like excavation requirements can change daily on a job site and you need to keep all of your employees abreast of the safety rules and regulations. Not having proper work permits, not meeting access or exit contingencies, and not performing daily safety inspections are just a few reasons why a business is fined.
  10. General Requirements: The world of construction changes on a frequent basis and this fact alone poses many issues regarding employee safety. If your project is running on time, you will find workers of all trades, working in close proximity to one another. There are on-the-job hazards from which accidents can happen, such as hand and power tools, and heavy equipment operation. There are also risks involving; falling, being electrocuted, air contamination issues, or not having a proper fire evacuation plan. All of these situations posed are extremely dangerous and may even cause worker fatality, if proper safety guidelines are not in practice.

The extra time and attention that a safety program entails can be lifesaving. It creates a safe environment for your workers and minimizes company liability at the same time. This is why it is so important to have a written safety program in place, whether you have one or one hundred employees. By practicing work place safety you can avoid accidents and OSHA fines.

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