SAFETY SOLUTIONS: Have You Really Trained Your Machine Operators
I have been in the safety, health and environmental
field for the last 50 years. Early in my career I was a
machine operator, then I became an OSHA compliance
officer, and worked my way up to being a corporate
safety, health and environmental manager for the largest
airplane company in the world. I am now a private consultant
running my own company, Podojil & Associates,
Inc., among other things, I do expert witness work that
includes representing companies, and workers who have
been injured from unsafe machinery, or from situations
where the employer had not provided proper training on
the equipment from the manufacturers’ owners’/operators’
manual.
I recently completed work on a multi-million-dollar
Lawsuit where a machine manufacturer was mentioned
in the litigation. I represented the manufacturer. I was
lucky enough to succeed in defending them in the case
but and I mean but was the machine ok as far as safety
goes? Was their website ok showing their machinery?
Were the electrical interlocks on the machine guards the
right type? Did the owners/operator’s manual provide
the right information? Were the warning placards and
symbols the right color, and did it provide the right information
and in multiple languages? I had many more
questions for this manufacturer.
The answer to these questions was “no”. If you are a
manufacturer, and if you have read my news articles, you
would know that you should be looking at your own advertising
information, or equipment, or at least asking
someone with a safety background to help you look at
your products.
OSHA is still citing machine guarding and lockout &
tagout. Case in point: The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational
Safety and Health Administration returned to
Gerresheimer Glass Inc., in Chicago Heights on Jan. 31,
2024, to verify compliance after inspections in October
and December 2022 found workers exposed to machine
hazards. OSHA proposed $145,415 in penalties after citing
the company with one repeat violation and four serious
violations for the following:
- Not training each authorized employee performing
and/or assisting with service and maintenance tasks,
including mold changes on lines and bottle machines.
- Failing to follow machine specific energy control procedures
during a mold change.
- Exposing workers to an unguarded chain and
sprocket on a crusher machine.
- Allowing employees to operate forklifts without required
training.
- Exposing workers to trip hazards from floor panels in
poor repair.
“Ignoring OSHA and industry-recommended machine
safety procedures is a leading cause of injuries in the
manufacturing industry," explained OSHA Chicago South
Area Director James Martineck. "Workers must be trained
in specific safety procedures for each machine they operate,
or service and they should never be exposed to operating
machine parts. Employers are responsible for
ensuring safe working conditions for all employees in
their facilities.”
When I was a Corporate Manager at Boeing, I told our
staff that before you send out information for anyone to
see, make sure you look at what you are sending. Are
there any unsafe conditions being shown? I look for machinery
that is not properly safe guarded, workers not
wearing PPE, hot machine surfaces not labeled, tools sitting
on top pf machines not secured, materials stored on
structures without guardrails or a load rating chart, and
even tutorial videos showing unsafe conditions.
We are not trying to pick on anyone. OSHA is becoming
tougher, and penalties are getting larger. Next time
you are in a large box store, look at how they block off
the aisles when they are working in them. Look at how
the storage racks are now properly bolted to the floor
and the materials are properly secured. Go to
www.youtube.com/watch?v=4lOVG1btC3Y&t=391s to
see how this came to be the norm. Before that assignment
I never knew how many people were being injured
in these stores. That assignment changed my life. I hope
you take a look at your products, and if we can help, let
us know.
For more information, click on the author's bio link above.
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