Jul 29 2009

Fire Safety in a Nutshell

Now I remember learning about fire safety as a child in school, but for some reason those lessons are not always retained. Luckily, Candace Quinn’s new book I Survived a House Fire…I Wish My Stuff Had is a great reminder of a luxury we all take for granted.  Here is a quick and simple recap of fire safety from her book, fireSafety.gov and SafetySkills Basic Fire Safety course.

1. Smoke Alarms

Smoke alarms are the simpliest, easiest and most effective way to save lives in a fire. Unfortunately, 2/3 of deaths in a home fire are because the home did not have a working smoke alarm or a smoke alarm at all. In order to reduce your risk during a fire do as follows:

  • Install a smoke alarm on every level of your home or business and near all sleeping areas.
  • Replace batteries at least once a year and your smoke alarm every 10 years.
  • Perform a monthly smoke alarm test.
  • Avoid placing smoke alarms near bathrooms, heating appliances, windows or ceiling fans.

2. Escape Plans

The next most vital part of fire safety is having an escape plan. All you need to do is think of every possible way to exit your home or business. Think of every alternative because the most likely exit may be blocked. Think of every door and window as a potential exit.

  • Practice an escape plan from every room twice a year.
  • Try to create 2 escape routes from each room.
  • Practice your plan during both daylight and evening hours.
  • Designate a specific meeting place away from the home.
  • Designate one person to go to the nearby telephone to call the fire department.

3. Practice Fire Safety

Practicing fire safety is the best way to avoid a fire occurring in the first place. Fires can start anywhere and at anytime, so safe habits are always a good idea.

  • Check all appliances and electrical equipment for frayed cords
  • Never leave food unattended while cooking
  • Have professionals regularly check heating and electrical equipment
  • Never smoke a cigarette in bed or without an ashtray
  • Never leave burning candles unattended.

4. Prepare

  • Install and routinely check smoke alarms
  • Install fire escape ladders to rooms on upper levels
  • Place fire extinguishers in kitchens and other locations with potential fire sources
  • Install fire blankets
  • Use electrical outlet covers on unused outlets
  • Purchase home owners or rental insurance to protect valuables
  • Keep documentation of all valuables – important paperwork, pictures, receipts – in a fireproof safe
  • Install indoor fire sprinklers – commercial and residential

5. What to do After a Fire

  • Contact your local American Red Cross, Salvation Army or other local disaster relief service to get temporary food, shelter and other necessities.
  • Contact your insurance company and locate important documentation. Insurance usually covers all necessities during this difficult time, so know your coverage.
  • Replace documentation and records if unable to recover.
  • Find a support system to vent your feelings about your experience – friends, family, support groups, therapists, online forums, etc.

Jul 27 2009

5 Ways to Create a Safer Work Environment

Workplace safety can appear very daunting for many employers. Creating a safe work environment for workers is not only morally right, but also a legal right in this country. There are many important tools available to ensure that all of the necessary precautions are taken to avoid and reduce accidents in the workplace.

1. Hazard Assessment/Job Safety Analysis (JSA)

Hazard assessment or job safety analysis (JSA) helps identify potential safety risks in the workplace and what measures should be taken to avoid these hazards.

2. Implementing controls at work stations

Implementing safety controls and devices to work stations based on the findings of your JSA will reduce the occurrence of workplace accidents. This includes built-in safety devices, such as a chemical eyewash station, or requiring employees to wear hard hats and protective eye wear on the job. This year alone, 78% of eye injuries were due to a lack of protective eye wear.

3. Provide proper safety training to employees.

View training as an investment. The better the training your employees receive, the less likely an incident will occur. Many employers forgo educating their workers on topics that could potential save them thousands in workers’ compensation claims and lawsuits.

Today there are more choices than ever when it comes to safety training. Many employers think the only option is the traditional classroom setting, but thanks to technology – online training is the quickest, easiest, cheapest and most environmentally conscious choice. Many online safety training companies offer their own tracking systems to alleviate the administrative burden from employers and some offer free courses (www.safetyskills.com) or trials. But always make sure that your training provider is IACET certified and has the proper credentials.

Whatever type of training is chosen, setting high standards of training completion on employees is crucial and any incidents of negligence by an employee should be deemed unacceptable. This ensures your financial security as a company, as well as the safety of all of your workers.

4. Staying current.

Keeping up with the latest guidelines and trends in safety is very time consuming, but necessary. OSHA sets the standard in safety. If an employer doesn’t have time for this task, finding a training provider that does is the best route to take.

It is also important to pay attention to any news coverage about emerging workplace safety issues. For instance, incidents of Heat Stress have become more and more common resulting in heat-related illness and death. Providing training on Heat Stress is a new trend that is becoming necessary, especially for those who work outdoors.

Besides training, all gear and equipment should be regularly maintenance and replaced when it becomes outdated or a potential hazard. This is another topic that has been in newsstands across the country due to the recent metro tragedy in Washington, D.C. It was reported that the metro train that crashed needed to be replaced for a newer model, which would have saved the lives of many.

5. Refresher courses.

Like any student who finishes a class, sometimes a refresher course is needed down the road. Issues in safety are constantly changing because our technology keeps advancing. This also means that with new advancements means new problems. Giving refresher courses every year is a great way to reduce the likelihood of workplace accidents.


Jul 24 2009

SafetySkills Appreciates Law Enforcement Professionals

SafetySkills Offers Police Departments $1300 of free safety training

As a token of appreciation for police officers, SafetySkills is offering 100 free training credits to Police Department nationwide that signs up to use SafetySkills™ Direct online training in August, 2009. 

SafetySkills offers Bloodborne Pathogens, Basic First Aid and a Basic CPR Refresher course.  Each of these courses has a printable completion certificate for each police officer that successfully completes an online course. 

All SafetySkills courses satisfy OSHA training requirements.  The complete SafetySkills course catalog has over 100 pre-packaged courses that can be assigned immediately after registering for a SafetySkills Direct account.

Go to http://www.safetyskills.com/registration/ to sign up.  Please mention that you heard about SafetySkills from a Law Enforcement Magazine before August 30, 2009 to receive 100 training credits for your police department.   These credits will not expire and can be used immediately, or a year from now.


Jul 22 2009

Calling all nonprofits – Susan Harwood Training Grant Program wants you!

Training programs are a necessary part of any organization to ensure employee safety. Unfortunately, this training can sometimes be costly and for nonprofit organizations it may interfere with the funds needed to support their mission. For nonprofits in this situation the Susan Harwood Training Grant Program is here.

 

This grant program was set in place to honor Susan Harwood, a woman who spent 17 years of her life as the director of Office of Risk Assessment in OSHA’s Health Standards Directorate.  She spent her career developing OSHA standards that consequently saved the lives and reduced injuries of employees across the United States.

 

Any nonprofit organization that is not an agency of State or local government is eligible to receive funding, including community and faith-based organizations. But all applications are due Friday, July 24th, 2009 by 4:30 p.m. E.T.

 

This grant will cover safety training in:

Concrete Products

Construction

Emergency Preparedness

Excavation

General Industry

Landscaping

Lead

Safety and Health Management

Workplace Violence

 

To add bang to your buck – all recipients of the Susan Harwood Training Grant will also receive 20% off on all SafetySkills courses and have unlimited access to our free Basic Awareness Series to any number of employees. To receive these discounts use coupon code: shtgrant or contact us at (888) 844-3549.

 

Go to http://www.osha.gov/dcsp/ote/sharwood.html to learn more about the grant and apply!


Jul 16 2009

The Handies video contest gives you a chance to win big and raise the bar on hand protection.

The following is a press release from Superior Glove.

Hands – and the gloves that protect them – are the subject of a video contest with a first prize of $5000. Superior Glove Works announces the ‘Handies’, a video contest about Hand Safety in the Workplace.

Hands are our most valuable asset. They contain more bones and moving parts than most other areas of the body and separate humans from the rest of the species. In the work environment, protecting them is the number-one challenge faced by companies where employees must wear gloves.

Despite efforts to increase awareness about the importance of taking care of them, approximately one-quarter of lost-time work injuries involve the hand because workers aren’t wearing their gloves when they get injured.

It’s time to change how messages about safety are delivered since cuts, burns and fractures continue to sideline workers. Even though safety organizations strive to educate the public about hazards, often trying to scare workers into doing the right thing, they still have a hard time reducing injury numbers.

It’s human nature to want that spoon-full-of-sugar instead of vinegar when it comes to changing habits, which is part of the inspiration behind the video contest. Superior Glove president Tony Geng is hoping someone out there with a yen to be a filmmaker plus a deep appreciation of our hands can help get a new, revitalized – and more memorable – message across, perhaps by reinforcing how amazing hands are, so that taking care of them becomes second nature.

Enter the Handies Video Contest or click on the contest link on the Superior Glove website. Video submissions must be under three minutes long, and the contest is open to Canadian and U.S residents with no entry fee, a limit of three entries per person and a deadline of Oct. 5th 2009. The top five videos selected (four runners-up each receive $100.00 cash) will be presented for viewing in Orlando, Florida, on Oct. 25th, 2009, at the National Safety Congress 2009 .


Jul 15 2009

Protect Your Workers from Heat Related Illness and Death.

The summer temperature is rising by the day and so are the rates of heat-induced illness and death. The first report of heat-induced illness took place in Memphis, TN on June 24, 2009, but deaths have been occurring all season and are sure to continue. These incidents remind us to provide employees with the proper training to ensure their safety when working in these conditions.

“Working in extreme temperatures is not only uncomfortable, it can be life-threatening,” said acting Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA Jordan Barab. “It is important for workers and their employers to minimize the chances of heat-induced illnesses, and imperative that they recognize the signs of heat stress and take the proper precautions to reduce the chances of illness or death.”

Many employers who spend the majority of their time indoors tend to lose sight of the risks that dramatic weather conditions can have on their outdoor workers. By simply taking the time to administer safety training on this issue can save everyone involved from getting burned.

“This heat is taking a toll on everyone, but especially to those who have to work in it day in and day out. We wanted to help these employees stay safe by creating a SafetySkills™ Heat Stress course that tackles this issue and what preventative measures should be taken,” said Trey Greene, CEO of noodleStream.com.


Jul 14 2009

Keep your eyes safe from injury during the month of July.

SafetySkills

Each day approximately 1,000 eye injuries occur in the U.S. and 90 percent of these are preventable. During the month of July, people throughout the country are encouraged to become aware of the protective measures they should take in order to keep their eyes safe and SafetySkills™ wants to help spread this message to employers.

“It is much easier to prevent an eye injury rather than healing from one,” said Trey Greene, CEO of noodleStream.com. “Our SafetySkills™ Personal Protective Equipment course is a quick and informative way to ensure the safety of your workers.”

The eye is the one of the most easily damaged parts of the body, yet 78 percent of eye injuries are due to a lack of protective eye wear. To show how strongly SafetySkills™ feels about this specific type of injury, the company is providing their Personal Protective Equipment course at discounted price all month long.

“Employee safety training is very important for businesses of any size and we want to help make it as affordable as possible for them. For National Eye Injury Prevention Month, SafetySkills™ will offer 20 percent off to those who purchase and complete our Personal Protective Equipment course and send them a free Personal Protection Against Industrial Hazards Quick Series Guidebook” said Greene.

For more information about noodleStream.com or our SafetySkills™ products, contact us at www.safetyskills.com.