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OSHA Puts New Twist in Old Program

OSHA 10 and 30 Hour Training now requires a two hour “Intro to OSHA” with emphasis on workers’ rights.

“Introduction to OSHA,” a revised training component with a huge emphasis on workers’ rights, is now required content in every OSHA 10 and 30 hour Outreach Training Program class. This was developed because of the Secretary of Labor’s desire to “strengthen the voice of workers”.

During the 10 and 30 hour outreach training program classes, OSHA trainers will now be required to spend a significant amount of time on the topics of whistleblower rights and filing a complaint and will provide samples of the weekly fatality and catastrophe report, a material data safety sheet, and the OSHA Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illnesses.

This is the first time OSHA has developed a PowerPoint presentation for these widely used programs that trainers are required to use.  There are also twelve handouts that the trainer must utilize in the training. 

According to OSHA’s Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA David Michaels:  “For too long workers have avoided making claims of unsafe work conditions out of fear of losing their jobs, we are confident that this new training will embolden workers to speak up when they find work practices that endanger their lives and the lives of their co-workers.”

Opponents to the change claim all this information is and was already a component of the 10 and 30 hour training. The level of coverage is now disproportionate to the level of the overall program and takes valuable time away from the true intent of the training, which has always been hazard recognition and avoidance.  Another major objection is that one item in the new introduction to OSHA is how to read a Material Safety Data Sheet.  Most trainers cover this in the Hazard Communication section of the training, already a required element. 

The OSHA Outreach Training Program is a voluntary program that seeks to teach workers about their rights and how to identify, reduce, avoid, and prevent job-related hazards. The program includes 10 and 30 hour courses in construction, general or maritime industry safety, and health hazard recognition and prevention; classes are taught through a network of OSHA-authorized trainers. Over the past three years, nearly two million students have received this training, and several states have made the program mandatory for some workers. 





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