❖ Protect workers where hazards exist.
Eliminate potential for serious injury or fatality.
♦> Ensure proper safety measures are taken. Safety depends on you.
Trenching and Excavation Safety
Protect employees exposed to potential cave-ins: Provide means of egress.
Protective Systems Used for Employees Exposed to Potential Cave-ins
<• Slope or bench the sides of the excavation,
❖ Support the sides of the excavation, or
Place a shield between the side of the excavation and the work
area.
Personal Protective Equipment
Personal protective equipment (PPE) is designed to protect employees
from serious workplace injury or illness resulting from contact with
chemical, radiological, physical, electrical, mechanical, or other work¬
place hazards that cannot be eliminated. PPE is a supplementary form
of protection when hazards have not been controlled through engineer¬
ing or administrative controls.
What is PPE?
•> Equipment that creates a barrier against workplace hazards.
Hard hats, goggles, gloves, hearing protection, respirators, etc.
A temporary measure only.
Ten Most Frequently Cited Serious
General Industry Standards
(Public Sector Only)
1. 1910.304(0(4): Lack of electrical path to ground.
2. 191 0.2 1 2(a)( I ): Missing machine guard.
3. 1910.151(c): Lack of suitable facility (i.e., eye wash/shower) for
quick drenching or flushing where exposed to injurious corrosive
materials.
4. 1910.304(0(5): Lack of supports, enclosures, and equipment to
be grounded.
5. NCOS 95-129(1): North Carolina General Duty Clause violation.
6. 1910.215(b)(9): Tongue guard on bench grinder out of adjustment.
7. 1 9 1 0. 1 33(a)( 1 ): Lack of appropriate eye or face protection when
exposed to hazards.
8. 1910.215(a)(4): Work rest improperly adjusted {'k inch max) on
bench grinder.
9. 1910.305(b)(1): Unused openings in electrical boxes or fittings
were not effectively closed.
10. 1910.23(c)(1): Unprotected open-sided floors, platforms and run¬
ways 4 feet or more above adjacent floor or ground level.
Hazard — Improper Grounding:
May allow a person contact with energized circuit or equipment.
Never use a
three-
prong
grounding
plug with
the third
prong bro¬
ken off.
1110.304(f)(4): The path to ground from circuits, equipment, and
enclosures shall he permanent and continuous.
Exits and Egress Hazard Control
Controls to ensure proper and safe means of egress include:
• Minimum access to exit width of 28 inches. |
• Generally, two exits should be provided.
• Exits and access to exits must be marked.
Means of egress, including stairways used for
emergency exit, should be free of obstructions
and adequately lit; where applicable, exits
with wheelchair access should be designated.
Employees must be aware of exits and trained in evacuation proce¬
dures.
| — ,~|
The floor plan of a multi-story building
should show location of stairways and
elevators. Plan must indicate the stairs,
not elevators, are the appropriate means
of exit in case of emergency
Photo Source [floorplan] :
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/
evacuation/ floorplan _demo.html
See the following links for more information on planning for work¬
place emergencies.
❖ Emergency management guide for business and industry;
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA),
w'ww.fema. gov71ibrary7bizindex.htm
❖ How to Plan for Workplace Emergencies and Evacuations;
U.S. Department of LaborOccupational Safety and Health
Administration, wwTV.osha.gov
❖ North Carolina Emergency Management (N.C. Department of
Crime Control & Public Safety); www.nccrimecontrol.org/
Occupational Safety and Health
Sources of Information
You may call 1-800-NC-LABOR to reach any division of the
N.C. Department of Labor; or visit the NCDOL home page on
the Internet at http://www.nclabor.com.
Division of Occupational Safety and Health
Mailing Address: 1 1 01 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1 101
Office Location: 1 1 1 Hillsborough St., Raleigh, N.C.
(Old Revenue Building, 3rd Floor)
Telephone: (919) 807-2900 Fax: (919) 807-2856
For information concerning education, training and interpre¬
tations of occupational safety and health standards, contact:
Bureau of Education, Training and Technical Assistance
Mailing Address: 1 1 01 Mail Service Center. Raleigh, NC 27699-1 101
Office Location: 1 1 1 Hillsborough St., Raleigh, N.C.
(Old Revenue Building, 4th Floor)
Telephone: (919) 807-2875 Fax: (919) 807-2876
For information concerning occupational safety and health
consultative services and safety awards programs, contact:
Bureau of Consultative Services
Mailing Address: 1101 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1 101
Office Location: 1 1 1 Hillsborough St., Raleigh. N.C.
(Old Revenue Building, 3rd Floor)
Telephone: (919) 807-2899 Fax: (919) 807-2902
For information concerning migrant housing inspections and
other related activities, contact:
Agricultural Safety and Health Bureau
Mailing Address: 1 101 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1 101
Office Location: 1 1 1 Hillsborough St., Raleigh, N.C.
(Old Revenue Building, 2nd Floor)
Telephone: (919) 807-2923 Fax: (919) 807-2924
For information concerning occupational safety and health
compliance, contact a Compliance field office:
Asheville Field Office
204 Charlotte Highway, Suite B. Asheville, NC 28803-8681
Telephone: (828) 299-8232 Fax: (828) 299-8266
Charlotte Field Office
901 Blairh ill Road, Suite 200, Charlotte, NC 28217-1578
Telephone: ( 704) 665-434 1 Fax: (704) 665-4342
Raleigh Field Office
Mailing Address: 1101 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1 101
Office Location: 313 Chapanoke Road, Suite 10, Raleigh, N.C.
Telephone: (919) 779-8570 Fax: (919) 662-4709
Wilmington Field Office
1200 N. 23rd St., Wilmington, NC 28405-1824
Telephone: (910) 25 1-2678 Fax: (910) 251-2654
Winston-Salem Field Office
4964 University Parkway, Suite 202, Winston-Salem, NC 27106-2800
Telephone: (336) 776-4420 Fax: (336) 767-3989
For statistical information concerning program activities,
contact:
Planning, Statistics and Information Management
Mailing Address: 1 1 01 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1 101
Office Location: 1 1 1 Hillsborough St., Raleigh, N.C.
(Old Revenue Building, 2nd Floor)
Telephone: (919) 807-2950 Fax: (919) 807-2951
To make an OSHA complaint,
OSH Complaint Desk: (919) 807-2796
1,000 copies of this public document were printed at a cost of $146, or $. 14 per copy.
TOP TEN OSH VIOLATIONS
CITED BY NCDOL IN 2006
rt l.c. Department of Labor
Cherie Berry
Commissioner of Labor
OSH Division Administration and Enforcement
Before 1973, the N.C. Department of Labor had promoted
safety by administering a program that encouraged industry to
comply voluntarily with safety and health standards. Today
the OSH Division promotes workplace safety and health
through strategic goals and initiatives. The department admin¬
isters and enforces the Occupational Safety and Health Act of
North Carolina through the Division of Occupational Safety
and Health. The agency’s mission is carried out through pro¬
grams to educate, consult, develop and enforce compliance
with safety, health and agriculture laws, rules, regulations and
standards. The OSH Division is subdivided into bureaus com¬
posed of several functional organizations: Consultative
Sendees; Education, Training and Technical Assistance; OSH
Compliance; Agricultural Safety and Health; and Planning,
Statistics and Information Management.
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of North Carolina
assumes that employers and employees desire to comply vol¬
untarily with safety and health requirements. Voluntary com¬
pliance is especially encouraged through the Bureau of
Consultative Services and the Bureau of Education, Training
and Technical Assistance.
Compliance — Through enforcement activity, OSH
Compliance assists employers in improving their work¬
place safety and health programs to eliminate on-the-job
injuries and illnesses.
Consultative Services provides free on-site consultation
regarding both safety and health issues. Services are pro¬
vided to employers of limited size and to employers with¬
in high-hazard industries, assisting them to reach their goal
of achieving a safe and healthful workplace for their
employees.
Education, Training and Technical Assistance (ETTA)
offers educational materials, arranges conferences and pro¬
vides professional training for OSH staff members and for
the public. The bureau also offers assistance with standards
interpretation. In addition, ETTA administers the adoption
of federal standards and develops North Carolina-specific
standards, responds to requests for technical assistance and
interpretations, and publishes a wide variety of industry
guides, safety and health standards books for general
industry and construction, and other documents of interest
to the public.