Reference materials are available from the OSHA website; www.osha.gov.
10 AND 30 HR Outreach Packages
New! 2018 OSHA Requirement:
By March 1, 2018, many building construction workers must have 10-hour or 30-hours of safety training
By, December 1, 2018, workers at job sites that require a Site Safety Plan (which includes sites that must designate a Construction Superintendent, Site Safety Coordinator or Site Safety Manager) must receive a minimum of 40 hours of training. That means you must have the OSHA 10 and 30 hours construction training. Select our package to meet the 40-hour training requirement, today!
Is OSHA Outreach Training Required In My State?
Some states have even determined that Outreach courses are necessary for certain workers. The following states have these requirements:
Connecticut
Required for all construction workers for public building projects paid for (in part or in full) by state funding where the total cost is over $100,000.
Florida
Required for all construction employees on any Miami-Dade County public or private contract valued in excess of 1,000,000.
Massachusetts
Required for construction workers at all public sector projects.
Missouri
Required for all construction workers on public work projects (state or municipal).
Nevada
Required for all construction employees (10-hour) and supervisors (30-hour).
New Hampshire
Required for all construction workers on public works projects with a total cost over $100,000.
New York
Required for all workers on public works contracts greater than $250,000.
Pennsylvania
Required for all employees (10-hour) and at least one supervisory employee (30-hour) of licensed contractors performing permitted construction or demolition work within the city of Philadelphia.
Rhode Island
Required for all workers on municipal and state construction projects with a total cost of $100,000 or more.
West Virginia
Required for workers on any public improvement project with a total cost in excess of $500,000.
For states that do not yet have a requirement, it may only be a matter of time! State and federal regulators want to ensure that workers who need OSHA training get OSHA training. These regulators want to establish a baseline of safety training for workers before they even step foot onto a worksite.
OSHA Outreach packages provided in partnership with 360training