BUILD A SAFER JOBSITE TODAY

OSHA 10 OR 30-HOUR
TRAINING FOR
CONSTRUCTION

PROTECT YOUR CREW WITH
10/30 HOUR OSHA TRAINING

Have your employees trained on how to find and fix hazards no matter what job task they’re working on. The 10 and 30 Hour OSHA Training Courses consist of a regimented training topics schedule with certain elective topics available as well. It covers the basics of safety and health rules and regulations like employee rights, employer responsibilities, and workplace hazards.

Our Authorized OSHA Instructor will come directly to your location, anywhere in the U.S., to deliver Construction OSHA 10 or 30-Hour training (Click here to view our General Industry training). Available in English or Spanish, this group training requires a minimum of 3 employees per OSHA guidelines. Upon successful completion, each participant will receive a Department of Labor (DOL) card by mail, valid for life (note: some states, cities, and unions may require periodic retraining).

The 10 Hour Training is designed for introductory training, while the 30 Hour is geared more for supervisory level.

Why Do I Need This Training?

This program is not required by OSHA, however, it may be required by your state or local jurisdictions, or as part of a contractual agreement to perform work.  The goal of this training is to bring awareness to workers about workplace hazards, as well as promote workplace safety and health.  It is also important to note that this training is not a substitute for the training found within the many OSHA standards.

OSHA Authorized Trainers For Onsite Instruction

Employers need to provide training on all potential hazards before an employee even starts working. Studies show that nearly one-third of occupational injuries and illnesses involved workers with less than one year of service at their company.

List of OSHA 10/30 Hour Training Topics Construction

The 10 Hour Training is designed for introductory training, while the 30 Hour is geared more for supervisory level.

Additional Resources:

Topics Overview

Background: categories of confined spaces; welding, cutting, and heating in confined spaces; ventilation, control factors, combination hazards, hazardous atmospheres, physical hazards, retrieval systems, communications, rescue, respirators, and testing.

OSHA’s purpose, origin of standards, coverage, duties, advisory committees, inspections, investigations, recordkeeping, citations, enforcement, 1926 subparts, and statistics.

What to expect during and after an OSHA inspection, types of violations, consultation assistance, and the OSHA emergency hotline.

Contractor requirements, accident prevention, machinery and tools, training and experience, education, fire protection, housekeeping, illumination, sanitation, PPE, access to medical records, emergency plans, safety program elements, management commitment and leadership, and worksite analysis.

Medical services; sanitation; noise exposure; ionizing and non-ionizing radiation; gases, vapors, fumes, dusts, and mists; illumination; ventilation; hazard communication; written program; labeling; MSDS; and training.

Flash point, flammable limits, types of fires and fire extinguishers, PASS method, flammable and combustible liquids, and dispensing flammable liquids.

Hazard statistics, health hazards, protective clothing and equipment, torches, arc welding, fire prevention, ventilation, and the proper use and care of gas cylinders

Requirements, hazards, wiring design and protection, grounding, hazardous locations, and safety related work practices.

Scaffold platform construction, types of scaffolding, hazards, capacity, access, use, fall protection, aerial lifts, training, and inspection.

Fall protection systems, leading edge work, hoist areas, holes and skylights, ramps, runways, walkways, excavations, dangerous equipment, overhand bricklaying, roofs, safety monitoring system, anchorage, lifelines, deceleration devices, warning devices, safety monitors, and fall protection plans.

Major causes of crane accidents, who is at risk, parts of a crane, types of cranes, pre-use planning, load capacity, hand signals, suspended loads, supporting surface, rigging equipment slings, and inspections.

Hazards, protection of employees, design of protective systems, inadequate protective systems, shoring, trench shields, hydraulic trench supports, materials and equipment, protection from vehicles, hazardous conditions, access and egress, inspections, and soil classification.

Background, post-tensioning operations, general requirements, working under loads, bulk cement storage, concrete pumping systems, power concrete trowels, bull floats, lockout/tagout, shoring and re-shoring, vertical slip forms, lift slab operations, and limited access zones.

Preparatory operations, hazards, stairs, passageways, chutes, removal of walls, masonry sections and chimneys, floors, storage, and blasting explosives.

Hazards, stairways, handrails, stair rails, stairs, temporary stairways, platforms and swing doors, ladders, and proper ladder use.

For questions or information about how to schedule an onsite 10 or 30 hour construction class, please contact us at (724) 776-1003. Also note that per OSHA, one session must have at least 3 students.

TRAINING IS ONE COMPONENT
OF OSHA COMPLIANCE

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