OSHA Wants To Conduct An Audit, Now What?
John J. Meola is a Certified Safety Professional (CSP) and holds an Associate in Risk Management (ARM). He is an OSHA 500 Trainer in Construction Safety and is also an Adjunct Instructor in Risk Control at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond VA. Meola has many years of experience building and managing safety & health plans for organizations of all sizes and industries. He is a published author of safety handbooks and is a highly energetic speaker on safety leadership topics.
In the event of serious injury or a fatality, fines can start at 12,00+ per safety violation and as much as $136,000 for willful negligence citation. In California, the fines start at $18,000 per violation. In addition, your worker's compensation experience modification will increase your premiums for the next three years. So, you must know that your safety program is in compliance, so you prepared for a drop-in audit or an audit that has resulted from a serious injury or fatality.
Areas Covered
- Overview of the sections of the Injury & Illness Prevention Program
- What questions OSHA will ask "only documentation is accepted. Verbal is not"
- How to get started on making sure you’re in compliance. Some insurance companies will cover the cost of bringing your program into compliance
Who Should Attend
- Owners
- Supervisors
- Hr and Project leads
Why Should You Attend
Your company needs to be informed about what OSHA will request in the audit. Owners will be asked to attend, as they carry the responsibility to confirm the safety program is in OSHA Compliance.
Supervisors, HR‘s, project leads are usually required to execute the safety program. These employees almost always have a level of fear wondering if they are executing the program and that it will pass and audit and avoid the possibility of citations in the event of a serious injury or fatality.
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