Builders and remodelers in New England and beyond are
looking forward to the JLC
LIVE 2012 at the Rhode Island Convention Center in
Providence, R.I., Wednesday, March 21 through Saturday, March
24. This year's conference kicks off with all-day intensive
education and training sessions on Wednesday. Featured topics
are:
• EPA RRP Certified Lead Safe Renovator Training
& Certification
€¢ OSHA Fall Protection
Training
€¢ Marketing Workshop
€¢ Framing Class
€¢ Business as a System
€¢ Net Zero Energy Homes
This year's Fall Protection offering is particularly timely,
says instructor Darcy Cook of Worcester, Mass.-based
SafetyTrainers.com.
That's because OSHA has just launched an intensive enforcement
effort focusing on residential builders and remodelers, with
fall protection at the top of the list of concerns. "OSHA has
made the residential construction industry a targeted
industry," Cook says. "Their director said that they are to put
all time, energy, and resources into the residential
construction industry."
In the past, OSHA has announced enforcement initiatives that
never amounted to much. But this time is different, says Cook:
"We are getting an increased number of phone calls right now of
people getting fined in the residential construction industry,
and the number one reason we are getting calls is because of
their fall protection. This time, it is definitely happening
for real."
Already, says Cook, enforcement at the general contractor
level is trickling down to affect subcontractors. "We are also
getting calls from residential trade contractors who are
working for a G.C., and the G.C.'s are now telling them that
they can't go on the job site unless they are in compliance,"
she explains. "So for example, I just had a fireplace
installation company call me because they didn't have a fall
protection plan in place, the workers weren't fall protection
trained and so forth, and the G.C. would not let them come and
install the fireplaces. So they had to come to us so we could
get them in compliance and up to speed as fast as they could,
so they could go back and finish the job."
And as the spring construction season picks up, Cook expects
to see OSHA get more active. "OSHA does things they call
€˜sweeps,'" she says, "where a lot
of agents get together and sweep through an area. They're
notorious for Cape Cod, from the bridge to Provincetown. So we
expect to see sweeps happening, especially in the spring
market. They've already warned us." And she says OSHA is
stickier these days about negotiating a reduction in the
penalty: "Everything typically now goes to a review board that
makes the final determination on penalties."
OSHA's new focus on residential contracting is driven by
their numbers analysis: statistics, the agency says, show that
workers are more likely to die or become disabled from
accidents on residential projects than in commercial work. The
reason might be that compared to the commercial world, safety
planning, safety management, and a workplace culture of safety
have not penetrated the homebuilding and remodeling
industry.
"The residential construction industry hasn't been educated
enough and doesn't have enough professional support and
resources," Cook says. "We are working with a lot of people who
are getting fined and waiting until the last minute before they
pick up the phone and ask for help. They really need to be
coached at this point in time, because they are in a targeted
industry for the next five years. OSHA is very clear and very
serious about this initiative, and what happens in the next
three years is going to determine what is going to happen by
year four or year five. This is not going away."