
Chances for an OSHA audit
According to James Walsh, the author of Silver Lake Publishing’s
Worker’s Comp for Employers and editor of OSHA in the Real World, the
likelihood of OSHA inspection is high when employer companies recently faced
workplace injuries and non-compliance. He added that inspectors tend to focus
on industries that have bad safety records. These would include food
processing, petrochemical and general chemical production, construction,
textiles and heavy manufacturing. There are also the priorities of inspection
set by the OSHA and they are as follows:
a.
Catastrophies and Fatal Accidents – this will
include the death of an employee or the hospitalization of three or more
employees.
b.
Employee Complaints – if employees are
threatened by imminent danger or when they are working on hazardous conditions.
c.
Programmed High-Hazard – there are areas with
high hazard rates and OSHA has set frequent inspections on these places.
d.
Follow-up inspections – to ensure that
facilities have complied with previous inspections.
The OSHA Checkup

The inspectors will also check the required written programs, evidence
of certification, training records, chemical inventories, MSDS and OSHA 300
Log. All of these will be part of your compliance in addition to maintaining a
safe environment for your employees. You are obliged to
supply copies of these documents to the inspecting officer in the length of the
OSHA audit.
Non-compliance to their standards may result to penalties which may
greatly affect the image of your company. The compliance to safety agencies
like the EPA compliance and the OSHA
audit will enable the government to ensure safety among workers and the
integrity of the environment in providing a safe and clean workplace for the
company. Also, the importance of waste
reduction and tracking is a vital component of EPA compliance and all other
ensuring bodies on clean environment and safe workplaces.