Practical takes on OSHA compliance, incident investigation, hazard management, and EHS program operations for manufacturing environments.
Hazard communication, lockout/tagout, and walking-working surfaces account for more than 40% of 1910 citations. The same categories, the same facilities, the same violations.
Read ArticleMost plants launch near-miss programs with good intentions and solid forms. Eighteen months later, submissions have dropped to two or three per quarter. The problem is almost never the form.
Read ArticleTRIR and DART rates tell you about injuries that already happened. If those are your primary safety KPIs, you are managing by rearview mirror.
Read ArticleControl of hazardous energy is the fourth most-cited standard in general industry. Most LOTO violations are not missing procedures - they are outdated ones.
Read Article29 CFR 1904 has specific rules about what counts as recordable, how long you have to enter it, and who signs the 300A. The penalties for getting them wrong are substantial.
Read ArticleHard hat and high-vis vest detection is reliable in controlled lighting. Glove and respiratory protection detection is not. Here is what to evaluate before buying.
Read ArticleIncident prediction is among the most compelling promises in industrial safety technology. The gap between marketing claims and operational reality is worth examining carefully.
Read ArticlePermit-required confined space fatalities are preventable. Most occur in facilities with written programs. The problem is program execution, not program existence.
Read ArticleMost EHS software platforms are built for large enterprise compliance teams. Mid-size manufacturers need a different feature set entirely. Here is how to evaluate the difference.
Read ArticlePre-task safety discussions are a leading safety indicator. Most toolbox talk programs generate documentation without behavior change. Here is the difference.
Read ArticleWearable IoT sensors and body area networks are producing ergonomic exposure data at a scale that was not possible with traditional observation methods. Here is what changes.
Read ArticleThe direct penalty for an OSHA serious citation averages under $5,000 after settlement. The actual cost is typically five to ten times that amount when all components are included.
Read ArticleLooking for our launch announcement? Read our September 2024 platform launch article.