𝐒𝐚𝐟𝐞𝐭𝐲 𝐊𝐚𝐢𝐳𝐞𝐧, 𝐋𝐋𝐂

𝐒𝐚𝐟𝐞𝐭𝐲 𝐊𝐚𝐢𝐳𝐞𝐧, 𝐋𝐋𝐂

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⛑️Safety Tailgate Talks🦺Safety as a Core Value☠️Safety Risk Videos🏛️ Safety Resource Links🔗

⛑️Safety Tailgate Talks🦺Safety as a Core Value☠️Safety Risk Videos🏛️ Safety Resource Links🔗

⛑️Safety Tailgate Talks🦺Safety as a Core Value☠️Safety Risk Videos🏛️ Safety Resource Links🔗

⛑️Safety Tailgate Talks🦺Safety as a Core Value☠️Safety Risk Videos🏛️ Safety Resource Links🔗

⛑️Safety Tailgate Talks🦺Safety as a Core Value☠️Safety Risk Videos🏛️ Safety Resource Links🔗

⛑️Safety Tailgate Talks🦺Safety as a Core Value☠️Safety Risk Videos🏛️ Safety Resource Links🔗

SAFETY TAILGATE TALKS/ SAFETY AS A CORE VALUE RESOURCES/

INTRODUCTION FOR TAILGATE/ TOOLBOX MEETINGS

Tailgate/Toolbox safety meetings are held to keep employees alert to work-related hazards and prevent injuries. 


In California, Tailgate or Toolbox safety meetings are required by T8 CCR 1509 are 10-15 minute on-the job meetings for employees in the construction industry.  Cal/OSHA expects the Tailgate or Toolbox meetings to address the specific hazards and safe work practices for the work tasks that employees are actually performing. 


For Federal OSHA and State OSHA programs,  1926.20(f)(2) expects that ...employees receive training or that the employer train employees, provide training to employees, or institute or implement a training program....


The meetings allow supervisors to draw on the experience of employees and use that experience to remind them of the dangers of particular construction processes, tools, equipment, and materials.

Here are some videos to help make the meetings interesting and educational to help prevent injuries.

The information contained in the video and written content posted represents the views and opinions of the original creators of the video and written content and does not necessarily represent the views or opinions of Safety Kaizen, LLC.  

Embracing health and safety as a core value means management provides safety leadership and demonstrates a sustained commitment to safety; puts comprehensive systems in place to find and fix hazards and address their root causes; and ensures that workers are active partners in workplace safety...


DOUGLAS L. PARKER, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OSHA, USDOL 9/27/2023

HERE ARE SOME GOOD FEDERAL OSHA.GOV SAFETY LINKS

  • Arsenic
  • Asbestos
  • Asphalt (Bitumen) Fumes
  • Autobody Repair and Refinishing
  • Benzene


  • Beryllium
  • Biological Agents
  • Bloodborne Pathogens and Needlestick Prevention
  • Cadmium
  • Carcinogens


  • Chemical Hazards and Toxic Substances
  • Chemical Reactivity Hazards
  • Chromium
  • Coal Tar Pitch Volatiles
  • Combustible Dust


  • Communication Towers
  • Competent Person
  • Composites
  • Compressed Gas and Equipment
  • Concrete and Concrete Products


  • Confined Spaces in Construction
  • Construction Industry
  • Control of Hazardous Energy (Lockout/Tagout)
  • Crane, Derrick, and Hoist Safety
  • Demolition


  • Diesel Exhaust
  • Electrical Contractors Industry
  • Emergency Preparedness and Response
  • Ergonomics
  • Eye and Face Protection


  • Fall Protection
  • Fire Safety
  • Hand and Power Tools
  • Hazard Communication
  • Hazardous Waste
  • Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPER)


  • Heat
  • Heat Illness Prevention Campaign
  • Hexavalent Chromium
  • Highway Work Zones and Signs, Signals, and Barricades
  • Hydrogen Sulfide
  • Ionizing Radiation

  •  Lead
  • Long Work Hours, Extended or Irregular Shifts, and Worker Fatigue
  • Mold
  • Motor Vehicle Safety
  • Nail Gun Safety


  • Non-Ionizing Radiation
  • Occupational Noise Exposure
  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
  • Powered Industrial Trucks
  • Pressure Vessels


  • Preventing Backovers
  • Process Safety Management
  • Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills
  • Radiation
  • Radiation Emergency Preparedness and Response


  • Residential Construction Industry
  • Respirator Change Schedules
  • Respiratory Protection
  • Scaffolding
  • Silica, Crystalline


  • Solvents
  • Spray Operations
  • Steel Erection
  • Toxic Metals
  • Tree Care Industry


  • Trenching and Excavation
  • Trucking Industry
  • Tuberculosis
  • Valley Fever (Coccidioidomycosis)
  • Ventilation


  • Waste Management and Recycling
  • Weather Insulating/Sealing
  • Welding, Cutting, and Brazing
  • Wildfires
  • Wind Energy


  • Winter Weather
  • Women in Construction
  • Wood Dust
  • Wood Products
  • Woodworking
  • Workplace Violence


falls - bRIDGE DECKING, FIXED SCAFFOLDING, FLOOR OPENINGS.

Bridge Decking

While walking toward a deck pan that needed to be secured, the worker tripped and fell onto an unsecured deck pan. The deck pan slid away from her, creating an opening. She fell for 75 feet, landing on the ground below. She died instantly from her injuries.

Let's look at the events leading up to this tragic incident, and see how it could have been prevented. The workers had no fall protection, which OSHA requires the employer provide when working at heights of 15 feet and above.

Let's see what happens when these workers use fall protection. Now there is a temporary horizontal lifeline attached along the beams. Each worker wears a full-body harness and connects to the lifeline using a self-retractable lanyard with self rescue capabilities. YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Caidas en la Construccion/Entablada de Puente

FIXED SCAFFOLDING

A worker was installing vinyl siding on a two-story townhome. He was standing on a ladder that was placed on top of a scaffold. A co-worker was on the scaffold cutting pieces of siding. The scaffold had no guardrails. The workers were not wearing any fall protection.

While standing on the top step of the ladder, the worker putting up siding overreached to one side and the ladder overturned. He fell nearly 20 feet and landed on the driveway below. He died later that day from injuries caused by the fall.

Let's look at the events leading up to this tragic incident, and see how it could have been prevented. Originally, the worker installing siding was standing on a ladder that was placed on top of a scaffold. This is a very serious and dangerous OSHA violation.

Also, there was no fall protection for these workers. OSHA requires employers to provide workers with fall protection when they are working on scaffolds.  YouTube, OSHA, 3 minutes.

Caidas en la Construcction/Andamios Fijos

Falls in Construction/Floor Openings

Two workers were framing the walls of a new two-story house with a basement.

They were working on the second floor near an open stairwell. There was no guardrail or floor cover, and the workers were not wearing personal fall protection. After framing one section of a wall, the workers raised it and moved forward to put it into place. While moving forward, one of the workers stepped towards the unguarded stairwell to hold the side of the wall section.

He fell down the unguarded stairwell opening. He fell 20 feet and landed on the concrete basement floor. He died from fatal head and internal injuries. Let's look at the events leading up to this tragic incident, and see how it could have been prevented. Originally, the workers were nailing in the boards to frame a section of the new wall, and the stairwell was not protected by a guardrail. Now, the stairwell is protected by a guardrail as required by OSHA.  YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Caidas en la Construccion/Aberturas en el Suelo

falls, lEADING EDGE WORK, REROOFING, SKYLIGHTS

Falls in Construction/Leading Edge Work

Four workers were insulating the roof and applying the top layer of sheet metal roof decking on a tall, pre-engineered building. The roof was fairly flat, there was no controlled decking zone, and the workers were not wearing any personal fall protection. The workers were using drills to screw the metal sheets into the purlins.

As one of the workers walked down the roof, he lost his footing. He fell through the space between the purlins, and landed on the floor below. He died the next day from his injuries.

Originally, the workers had no fall protection, which OSHA requires the employer to provide when working at heights of 15 feet and above.

Then they are using a temporary horizontal lifeline. This involves a horizontal cable attached to two or more anchor points on the roof. In this system, the workers connect their harnesses to a horizontal lifeline that is secured to the roof structure instead of individual anchor points.

YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Caidas en la Construccion/Trabajo en Cornisa

Falls in Construction/Reroofing

Two workers were reroofing a two-story home with a pitched roof. They were not wearing any personal fall protection. The workers used nail guns to install shingles over an old layer of shingles.

One of the workers was close to the edge of the roof. As she reached to pick up another shingle, she lost her balance. She slipped off the edge of the roof. She fell more than 20 feet and landed on the driveway below. She died instantly from her injuries.

Let's look at the events leading up to this tragic incident, and see how it could have been prevented. Originally, the workers had no fall protection, which OSHA requires when working in residential construction at heights of 6 feet and above.

Each system has a full-body harness, a rope-grab lifeline, and connectors. Snaphooks connect each worker's rope-grab lifeline to secure roof anchors, which are located higher up on the roof. D-rings connect the workers' safety harnesses to their rope-grab lifelines.

As before, the worker reaches over to pick up a shingle, loses her balance, slips, and falls. But now, because she is wearing a fall arrest system, she only slips 2 feet and doesn't fall off the roof.

YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Caidas en la Construccion/Reparacion del Techo

Falls in Construction/Skylights

 Two workers were reroofing a two-story townhome. They were not wearing any personal fall protection, but guardrails were installed on the roof. The roof of the building was pitched and there was one skylight in the area that the workers were reroofing. One worker was using a nail gun to install new shingles over the single layer of old shingles. He was installing shingles in the center of the roof near an unguarded skylight. A co-worker was setting shingles.  The roof already had guardrails, so the employer thought his workers were protected from fall hazards. But, he was wrong. Originally, when the worker was installing shingles near the skylight, the skylight was only covered by a translucent plastic dome.  

YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Caidas en la Construccion/Claraboyas

ELECTRICAL, LADDERS & CRANES & STRUCK-BY CRANE

Electrocution/Work Safely with Ladders Near Power Lines

 This OSHA prevention video describes how to prevent deaths and injuries from employees' contact with overhead power lines while using ladders. 

YouTube, OSHA, 6 minutes.

Electrocución/Trabaje de manera segura con escaleras cerca de líneas eléctricas aéreas

Prevent Electrocutions: Work Safely with Cranes near Power Lines

 This OSHA prevention video describes how to prevent deaths and injuries from employees' contact with overhead power lines while using cranes. 

YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Prevenga electrocuciones: Trabaje de manera segura con grúas cerca de líneas de alta tension

Struck-by Accidents in Construction/Swinging Cranes

 A driver was delivering a load of steel beams to a job site. After positioning his flatbed truck as directed, he stood near the hydraulic crane that was offloading the truck to watch the operation. The company operating the crane had secured the area using vehicles and two strategically placed workers to keep out unauthorized personnel. However, no barricades were in place to stop workers from coming within the crane's swing radius. The driver was allowed to stay in the secured area because he was a friend and knew the operator.  After the incident, a temporary barricade including three-inch caution tape is in place to prevent workers from coming too close to the swing radius of the crane. In addition to the barriers, employers should make sure crane and/or superstructure movement occurs only when an "all clear" signal is given to the operator. Now, as the crane begins to move, no worker is within the swing radius and no contact occurs. 

YouTube, OSHA, 4 minutes.

Golpes Causados por Accidentes en Construccion/Gruas en Movimiento

HYDROCARBON GASES & VAPORS,

Protecting Oil and Gas Workers from Hydrocarbon Gases and Vapors

 Workers at oil and gas extraction sites could be exposed to hydrocarbon gases and vapors, oxygen-deficient atmospheres, and fires and explosions when they open tank hatches to manually gauge or collect fluid samples on production tanks. These exposures can have immediate health effects, including loss of consciousness and death. This video describes the hazards associated with manual gauging and fluid sampling on oil and gas production tanks and describes steps that employers and workers can take to do this work safely.  YouTube, CDC, 13 minutes. 

Protección a trabajadores de la industria petrolera de los gases y vapores de hidrocarburos

Safety and health program core value elements from OSHA

SAMPLE SAFETY PROGRAM STARTING POINT TO MOVE TOWARD SAFETY AS A CORE VALUE - Several OSHA standards for the construction industry address safety and health program elements. Following is a list of topics relevant to developing and maintaining a safety and health program, along with some regulatory citations applicable to each topic.

 A. Initiate and Maintain Such Programs as May be Necessary to Comply with this Part [29 CFR 1926.20(b)]

B. Management Commitment to Injury and Illness Prevention

  1. Provide employees with sanitary and safe working conditions. [29 CFR 1926.20(a)]
  2. Assign injury and illness prevention responsibilities. [29 CFR 1926.20(b)]
  3. Give injury and illness prevention designees authority to correct hazards. [29 CFR 1926.32(f)]
  4. Ensure employees that they may voice injury and illness prevention concerns without fear of reprisal. [29 CFR 1903.11(d)]
  5. Inform employees of hazards. [29 CFR 1926.21(b), 29 CFR 1926.33, 29 CFR 1926.59, 29 CFR 1926.454, and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Z]
  6. Coordinate hazard communication with other employers on site. [29 CFR 1926.59, 29 CFR 1926.65, and 29 CFR 1926.652]
  7. Post the OSHA State or Federal Poster. [29 CFR 1903.2(a)]

C. Hazard Identification and Determination

  1. Evaluate operations, procedures, facilities, and equipment to identify hazards. [29 CFR 1926.20(a) and 29 CFR 1926.21(b)]
  2. Monitor exposure levels. [29 CFR 1926.55, 29 CFR 1926.62, 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Z, and 29 CFR 1926.1101]
  3. Ensure regular injury and illness prevention inspections. [29 CFR 1926.20(b)(2), 29 CFR 1926.703(b), and 29 CFR 1926.1081(g)]
  4. Conduct accident investigations. [29 CFR 1904.4]
  5. Determine if engineering or administrative controls or personnel protective equipment are to be used. [29 CFR 1926.103 and 29 CFR 1926.951]

D. Hazard Elimination and Control

  1. Ensure machines and tools are in safe working order and in compliance with relevant standards. [29 CFR 1926.20(b)(3), 29 CFR 1926.1417(a), and 29 CFR 1926.951]
  2. Institute engineering and work practice controls to eliminate health hazards. [29 CFR 1926.55, 29 CFR 1926.103, and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Z]
  3. Perform housekeeping to remove hazards posed by scrap and debris in work areas. [29 CFR 1926.25, 29 CFR 1926.852, 29 CFR 1926.152(c)(5), and 29 CFR 1926.900(k)(5)]
  4. Provide appropriate personal protective equipment when other controls are infeasible. [29 CFR 1926.28(a) and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart E]
  5. Guarantee safe means of egress. [29 CFR 1926.34]

E. Emergency Response Planning

  1. Develop emergency response plans. [29 CFR 1926.35 and 29 CFR 1926.65(q)]
  2. Develop fire prevention and protection programs. [29 CFR 1926.24, 29 CFR 1926.352, and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart F]

F. First Aid and Medical

  1. Provide medical services, first aid treatment, and supplies. [29 CFR 1926.50(a), 29 CFR 1926.103, 29 CFR 1926.50(c), 29 CFR 1926.50(d), and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Z]
  2. Ensure availability of emergency rescue for injured employees. [29 CFR 1926.50(e), 29 CFR 1926.106(a), 29 CFR 1926.21(b)(6), and 29 CFR 1926.802(b)]
  3. Post emergency numbers for physicians, hospitals, or ambulances. [29 CFR 1926.50(f)]

G. Training

  1. Train employees to recognize hazards. [29 CFR 1926.21(b)(2), 29 CFR 1926.65, 29 CFR 1926.302(e), and 29 CFR 1926.1060]
  2. Train workers to recognize and avoid unsafe conditions. [29 CFR 1926.21(b)(2), 29 CFR 1926.65, 29 CFR 1926.454, and 29 CFR 1926.901(c)]
  3. Provide training on safe work practices and applicable standards. [29 CFR 1926.21(b)]
  4. Provide training on safe operation of equipment and machinery. [29 CFR 1926.20(b)(4) and 29 CFR 1926.302(e)]
  5. Provide training on hazards of access ladders and stairways. [29 CFR 1926.1060(a), 29 CFR 1926.454, 29 CFR 1926.800(b), and 29 CFR 1926.800(c)]
  6. Provide training on confined and enclosed space entry hazards and precautions. [29 CFR 1926.21(b)(6), 29 CFR 1926.353(b), and 29 CFR 1926.801]

H. Recordkeeping and Abatement Verification

  1. Record injuries and fatalities. [29 CFR 1904.5 and 29 CFR 1904.8]
  2. Maintain medical records. [29 CFR 1926.33]
  3. Maintain exposure records. [29 CFR 1926.33]
  4. Maintain appropriate documents and tags for abatement verification. [29 CFR 1903.19]

LINKS TO GOVERNMENT STANDARDS & RESOURCES

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