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OSHA30 hour Outreach
Construction Industry |
The OSHA 30 hour Outreach - Construction Industry Course contains the following lessons:
- Asbestos
- Concrete and Masonry
- Crane Safety
- Electrical Safety
- Ergonomics
- Excavations
- Fall Protection
- Fire Safety
- Forklift Safety
- Hand and Power Tools
- Hazard Communication
- Hearing Conservation
- Heavy Equipment
- Introduction to OSHA
- Ladder Safety
- Lead and Crystalline Silica
- Materials Handling
- Permit-Required Confined Spaces
- Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- Respiratory Protection
- Scaffolds
- Steel Erection
- Struck and Caught Hazards
- Welding and Cutting
Employers who have trained their workers with the OSHA Outreach Program for Construction have seen reductions of up to 66% in lost-time injuries. This 30-hour construction safety course is the online version of that successful program and is intended to provide instruction on a variety of general construction safety and health standards.
This is an OSHA 30-hour course, so you are expected to spend 30 hours in the course.
Course topics include: Introduction to OSHA, Struck and Caught Hazards, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), Hearing Conservation, Respiratory Protection, Lead and Crystalline Silica, Asbestos, Hazard Communication, Electrical Safety, Hand and Power Tools, Fall Protection, Ladder Safety, Excavations, Scaffolds, Crane Safety, Heavy Equipment, Forklift Safety, Materials Handling, Permit-Required Confined Spaces, Fire Safety, Welding and Cutting, Concrete and Masonry, Steel Erection, and Ergonomics.
Note: Authorized OSHA Outreach Trainers sign and mail OSHA 30-Hour cards to students who successfully complete this course. AdvanceOnline Solutions is the provider of this OSHA Outreach Training Program online course.
If you fail this course online, OSHA disqualifies you from completing the OSHA 30-Hour Construction training online.
OSHA recommends Outreach Training Program courses as an orientation to occupational safety and health for workers. Workers must receive additional training, when required by OSHA standards, on the specific hazards of their job.
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