Sponsored by J. J. Keller & Associates, Inc.
What’s black and white and one of the first things an OSHA officer will look for during an inspection? The answer: your written safety and health plans.
Developing effective written plans isn’t just a paperwork exercise or a tool to help you pass an OSHA inspection. Written plans, whether required or not, streamline your safety efforts and provide a foundation for keeping workplace safety and health a priority.
Your organization likely falls under one or more of 50-plus written plan requirements for general industry and construction. Are you sure you have the ones you need? During this webinar, we’ll look at:
Tricia Hodkiewicz, EHS Editor, J. J. Keller & Associates Inc.
Tricia has been an environmental, health and safety editor at J. J. Keller for more than 25 years. She creates content for manuals, handbooks, videos, signs, training materials, online solutions and webinars. Tricia edits publications for the general and construction industries and specializes in OSHA and Environmental Protection Agency subjects such as bloodborne pathogens, hazard communication, HAZWOPER, signs and labels, written safety plans, oil spill prevention, and EPCRA.
Robin Marth, EHS Editor, J. J. Keller & Associates Inc.
Robin joined J. J. Keller in 2021 as an editor on the EHS content team. Her areas of expertise include workplace safety administration, ergonomics, environmental management and fleet safety. Robin holds a CSP designation from the Board of Certified Safety Professionals and is an OSHA outreach general industry trainer.
Kevin Druley, Associate Editor, Safety+Health magazine
Kevin is associate editor of Safety+Health and serves as co-host of the magazine’s “On the Safe Side” podcast.