General Industry Health and Safety Program Development / Occupational Hazard Sampling / Monitoring
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulates toxic and hazardous substances in general industry such as lead, benzene, ionizing radiation, formaldehyde and more. These regulations include maximum Permissible Exposure Limits for chemical exposures.
If your line of work may expose employees to toxic and hazardous substances listed here, or if you would like to know more about toxic and hazardous substance airborne risk at your facility, you may benefit from a General Industry Health and Safety Program Development / Airborne Occupational Hazard Sampling / Monitoring Assessment.
If any of the following statements are true, you may benefit from a General Industry Health and Safety Program Development / Airborne Occupational Hazard Sampling / Monitoring Assessment
- I am unsure of the exposure to hazards that my employees are being exposed to during the course of their work.
- We’re unsure if our Health and Safety Program can withstand pressure from OSHA
- Need a Certified Industrial Hygienist in your corner helping you make the best decisions?
- We made some changes to operation and would like to know if that impacted daily / maximum employee exposure.
- Some of my employees are concerned that they may be being overexposed to a certain hazard at work.
- Our organization has been informed that an OSHA complaint has been filed and we need assistance.
Typical General Industry Occupational Hazard Sampling / Monitoring Services
Typical General Industry Occupational Hazard Sampling / Monitoring Services include
- A meeting to discuss concerns and details of the hazards, current controls of hazards, and other relevant information
- A Walkthrough of your facility with a purpose to to establish where the source of the hazards are and establish a sampling / monitoring strategy.
- Monitoring / Sampling for hazard exposure levels throughout your facility
- Development of applicable written Health and Safety Programs and corporate training
- A written report detailing findings and recommendations where applicable.
If you feel like you would benefit from General Industry Occupational Hazard Sampling / Monitoring, please fill out our contact form or call Richard A. Lynch directly at 609) 694-4539.
General Industry Safety Training
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration uses the term general industry to include all industries not included in agriculture, construction, or marine. A vast majority of general industry standards will require the employer to train their employees about the hazards that they are facing and how to reduce the risk of exposure which could lead to adverse health and safety effects. Training employees can include Hazard Communication, Personal Protection Equipment, Exit routes and Emergency Planning, Training on specific Written Safety Programs and more.
If any of the following statements are true, you may benefit from General Industry Safety Training
- It has been a while since my employees have been trained regarding the hazards they are facing.
- We made same changes / hired new employees and would like an updated training session to include these new changes.
- We would like an energetic training session that will get my employees to learn about the hazards that are present and how to avoid negative health and safety consequences.
Typical General Industry Safety Training Services
Typical General Industry Safety Training Services include
- A meeting to discuss concerns and details of the hazards, current controls of hazards, and other relevant information needed for training
- A walkthrough of your facility with a purpose to to establish where the source of the hazards are and establish good training materials.
- Two separate safety training sessions, one for employees, and one for management
- Digital Sign-in sheet and Full access to training materials
If you feel like you would benefit from General Industry Safety Training, please fill out our contact form or call Richard A. Lynch directly at 609) 694-4539.
OSHA Citation Response
If an OSHA inspector has visited your facility and issued you a citation and notification of penalty, occupational health and safety work is in order and timely response to this citation is imperative given businesses are given 15 (fifteen) working days to respond. Deciding on whether you agree to the citation or contest this citation should be considered with as much information as possible. Taking proper corrective action and moving forward with a proper game plan will make responding to citation less painful.
If any of the following statements are true, you may benefit from a OSHA Citation Response
- I just received a citation from OSHA and I don’t know what to do.
- I would like a certified industrial hygienist to assist me through this citation process.
- How do I move forward after dealing with an OSHA citation.
Typical OSHA Citation Response Services
Typical OSHA Citation Response Services include
- A meeting to discuss concerns and details of the citations.
- A walkthrough of your facility with a purpose to to establish where the citation was identified.
- Detailed plan of action that addresses all areas of the Citation.
- Testing and monitoring of certain hazards if applicable by the citation.
If you feel like you would benefit from OSHA Citation Response Services, please fill out our contact form or call Richard A. Lynch directly at 609) 694-4539.