How much does a jobsite injury really cost?

I recently can across a very interesting tool to help you to realize how much does a jobsite injury cost you.  Employers can use the” $afety Pays” to assess the impact of occupational injuries and illnesses on their profitability. This program uses a company’s profit margin, the average costs of an injury or illness, and an indirect cost multiplier to project the amount of sales a company would need to generate to cover those costs. The program is intended as a tool to raise awareness of how occupational injuries and illnesses can impact a company’s profitability, not to provide a detailed analysis of a particular company’s occupational injury and illness costs. Your local OSHA On-site Consultation Office can help small businesses identify workplace hazards and develop and implement an effective injury and illness prevention program.  This tool is part of the OSHA Small Business program that provides links to numerous OSHA resources and information designed specifically for small business employers, including safety and health tools and publications, easy-to-follow guides for specific OSHA standards, and descriptions of benefits that small businesses receive from OSHA. The page also includes information on the Safety and Health Achievement Recognition Program (SHARP), which recognizes small business employers who operate exemplary injury and illness prevention programs.

OSHA Job Site Fire Safety

job site caddyWe would like to introduce a new product for the Job Site.  OSHA job site fire safety requires that fire extinguishers be properly identified, be easy to locate and have the proper identification.  Our new product Jobsite Caddy fills all these requirements.  Jobsite Caddy is designed to support an effective fire protection and spill response program for your job site.  This all-inclusive station serves as a fire extinguisher holder, spill response solution, and a hub for job-specific emergency information.  It can be ordered base separably, base with extinguisher flag, base with extinguisher and spill station flag and spill kit.

spill kit

Surviving an OSHA inspection.

Here is a link to an article that is very informative on how to deal with and survive an OSHA inspection.  It covers the four steps of an inspection.  The opening conference, the inspection, the closing conference and the citations.  It also states the importance of having a designated employee at the job site. They state that the odds of an OHSA inspection is less that 1% is is important to have a plan.