Cultivating a Relationship with OSHA

 

misconceptions (3)

It is one of the questions that I get asked most often as a business owner: “How do I approach my state OSHA office?” Companies want to operate as safely as possible to avoid fines, while their local OSHA office many not even know what rope access is. The problem is wide spread, and it’s up to the company to take the first step to remedy the situation.

Many rope access employers and employees avoid the acronym OSHA at all costs, but it doesn’t have to be that way. By sharing my experience with OSHA, my hope is to change your misconceptions with this organization and help answer some of the questions you may have regarding your first steps towards introducing your rope access company to OSHA.

My journey with OSHA started out in an unorthodox manner, yet it ultimately changed my perception of safety and OSHA itself. My first official rope access project was a very challenging condominium complex where I encountered a disgruntled window cleaner whose services had just been replaced by my rope access company; this person threatened to report my company to OSHA for what he believed were willful safety violations. He regularly photographed and reported my work to the property manager and shouted that four letter word OSHA as if it were an obscenity.

I can tell you that it became my worst fear that I could potentially be facing a compliance officer based on this person calling OSHA. I certainly did not want anything to do with OSHA nor did I need a citation at that time. Thankfully, the hands of fate intervened and my destiny with OSHA became an invaluable learning experience. Thinking back, if I could meet that window cleaner today, I would shake his hand and thank him for all that he has done for me and my company.

It begins with your employees; building a small company and hiring employees changes the game significantly, since you now inherit the title of ‘Employer’. This title comes hand in hand with another: Employer Responsibilities. Under the General Duty Clause, Section 5(a)(1) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are required to provide their employees with a place of employment that is “free from recognizable hazards that are causing or likely to cause death or serious harm to employees. 

In simpler terms, employers have a responsibility to provide a safe workplace. (The full list of key employer responsibilities can be found here: https://www.osha.gov/as/opa/worker/employer-responsibility.html.)

It’s key to understand the importance of safety and health management so that your rope access company is not on the wrong end of an OSHA inspection or worse, a work-related injury or fatality at your company.

So, what’s at stake if you are the employer?

In short: your company, your livelihood, or someone’s life. A work-related injury or fatality will put your company in the cross-hairs of OSHA and also Civil Litigation, at which point it is all but too late. By the time a trial comes around, a lawyer will have a carefully prepared case against you and your company. If this happened to you tomorrow, how prepared would you be?

No one will ever be prepared for a work-related fine, injury or fatality, but you can make sure you are arming your company against the occurrence of all three by being prepared, knowledgeable, above all, genuinely friendly with your local OSHA office.

Q & A’s for Small Business Employers

Q: Can an OSHA Compliance Officer (CSHO) show up unannounced at your site without an appointment for a surprise inspection? Do they need to call ahead, email or send notice of an inspection?

A: Notice of intended inspection shall not be given to an employer prior to the time of actual entry upon the workplace. Compliance Officers will present credentials, and shall be permitted to inspect places of employment, Question employees, and investigate conditions, practices or matter connection with employees.

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Top 5 Benefits of Working in Rope Access

Top 5 benefits of working in rope access

  1. Physical Fitness: Due to how physically demanding the work is, rope access leaves technicians little option other than to be physically fit. In most cases, just performing the work itself goes a long way in helping to cultivate a higher level of physical fitness. Being a rope access technician is not dissimilar to working out for forty hours a week; the exercise is built into the job.
  2. Unbeatable Views: One of the awesome benefits of being hired to access an area no one else can get to is that you get to see what no one else gets to see. There are views technicians see that only a handful of people in the world have or will see, places they will access that they would never be able to access if they weren’t performing rope access. The underside of the Skywalk at the Grand Canyon, government buildings with top level security, rooftops on New York City skyscrapers, the space shuttle Atlantis: without rope access, we wouldn’t have seen any of them.
  3. Patience & Focus: Two traits that can easily make or break technicians, and those technicians also take home with them and see the benefits of in their personal lives. Patience and focus are paramount when performing rope access; ascending 200 feet, performing an edge start on a 50 story building, tying knots necessitate a serious level of patience and focus because it could be the difference between life and death. Learning to have both of these qualities while on line brings with it the benefit of these qualities in the technician’s daily life, lending to an often times calmer, thorough and more focused thought process.
  4. Coordination: We could have included this with number three, but it’s significant enough to warrant its own spot. There is a very real necessity for coordination in rope access; to put it simply, you can’t accomplish anything on ropes if you resemble a fish out of water. Technicians need to be coordinated enough to perform, hold and maintain multiple physical tasks simultaneously which is an incredibly useful trait to have carry over into one’s personal life.
  5. Career Path: Rope access holds the potential for countless career paths. There are countless windows of opportunity, whether a technician is interested in being an instructor, evaluator, supervisor, project manager, operations manager or even the director of a safety division, all are possibilities that are open to technicians in the rope access community. Many enter into rope access in the early stages of their career development, and with dedication and proper planning they can take their career within the industry in nearly any direction, up to and including retirement. Rope access appears on the surface to be a limited potential occupation for young climbers, when in reality it is the perfect way to begin laying the foundations of an enduring and self-sustaining career.
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