U.S. OSHA Limits Training Time for 10- and 30-hour Courses

Oct 31st, 2010 | By | Category: Health and Safety

The U.S. Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) has revised its policy for all Outreach Training Programs to address the number of hours each day that a student may spend in OSHA 10- and 30-hour classes. OSHA revised the length of daily classroom instruction to prevent workers from being saturated with so much information that they may miss content that could prevent injuries, illnesses and death.

New OSHA Training Requirements

The revised program policy now requires OSHA trainers to limit worker training classes to a maximum of 7.5 hours per day. Before OSHA made this change, there were no limitations on how long classes could last each day. With 10 hours of training, along with necessary breaks and lunch, students could sit in classes for up to 13 hours per day. OSHA became concerned that long, mentally-fatiguing class days might cause students to miss essential safety and health training.

Another concern was that, in some cases, one- and three-day training classes were not meeting 10- and 30-hour program time requirements. This concern became evident after OSHA conducted random records audits and unannounced monitoring visits.

To address these issues, the agency now requires OSHA outreach trainers to conduct 10-hour courses over a minimum of two days and 30-hour courses over at least four days. The agency also set up an outreach fraud hotline at 847-725-7810 to which the public can call to file complaints about program fraud and abuse.

“Limiting daily class hours will help ensure that workers receive and retain quality safety training,” said Assistant Secretary of Labor for OSHA David Michaels.

This policy change is effective immediately and will be reflected in the next revision of the Outreach Training Program Guidelines. OSHA will not recognize training classes that exceed 7.5 hours per day or do not meet all program content requirements. In such cases trainers will not receive completion cards to distribute to students. Trainers may, however, submit written requests for exceptions to limiting training days to 7.5 hours based on extenuating circumstances.

OSHA’s Outreach Training Program

The Outreach Training Program, a voluntary participation information resource, is part of OSHA’s Directorate of Training and Education. It comprises a national network of more than 17,000 independent trainers who teach workers and employers about OSHA, workers’ rights and how to identify, avoid and prevent workplace hazards. There are 10- and 30-hour outreach classes for construction, general industry and maritime workers and 16-hour classes for disaster site workers. Students who successfully complete classes receive completion cards.

Further Information

Article Source: U.S. Occupational Health and Safety Administration.

Photograph: Golden Gate by Ali Seifert, Bushmills, Antrim, United Kingdom.

Return to the EHS Journal Home Page

Tags: , , , , , ,

One Comment to “U.S. OSHA Limits Training Time for 10- and 30-hour Courses”

  1. As an OSHA outreach trainer, I have to say that I agree with the decision to limit training toi 7.5 hours a day. Too many companies try to cram a 10-hr OSHA training class into one day, or a 30-hour OSHA training class into three days, and its just too much info for that short persiod of time. Companies seem (to me at least) to have accepted this after a little grumbling at first.

Leave a Comment