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Annual and Closeout Alliance Report
Iowa-Illinois Safety Council
- Alliance Background
Date Signed:
February 8, 2008
Alliance Overview.
OSHA and Iowa-Illinois Safety Council (IISC) formed an Alliance to provide the
IISC members and others with information, guidance, and access to training
resources that will help them protect employees’ health and safety, particularly
in reducing and preventing exposure to falls, driving hazards and improving
hazard recognition.
Implementation Team Members.
Brian Bothast, Compliance Assistance Specialist (CAS) with the Peoria OSHA
Office Barry Salerno, Team Leader with the Peoria OSHA Office Laura Johnson,
Executive Director from the Iowa-Illinois Safety Council Margaret Meade,
Director of Program Development & Training for the IISC Jack Wilkinson, Director
of Training for the Iowa-Illinois Safety Council
- Implementation Team Meetings
Barry Salerno met with Laura Johnson and the IISC Board of Directors to develop
topics and speakers for the 2010 Professional Development Conference.
On October 13, 2009, Brian Bothast and Margaret Meade discuss opportunities for
OSHA and the IISC to work together and alliance renewal.
On December 11, 2009, Brian Bothast and Laura Johnson discussed training topics
for the Iowa-Illinois Safety Council.
On February 26, 2010, a final closeout meeting was held with Brian Bothast,
Barry Salerno, Laura Johnson, Executive Director from the Iowa-Illinois Safety
Council and Margaret Meade, Director of Program Development & Training for the
IISC.
- Activities and Products
Evaluation Period.
February 8, 2009 to February 8, 2010
Alliance Activity.
On March 4, 2009, Margret Meade provided a presentation on Defensive Driving at
Downstate Illinois Occupational Safety and Health Conference.
On April 23, 2009, Brian Bothast provided a presentation at the Iowa-Illinois
Safety Council Professional Development Conference in Coralville, Iowa. Brian’s
presentation addressed the most common violations for general industry,
construction and emergency action. Brian also addressed violations related to
the OSHA emphasis programs, hexavalent chrome and asbestos.
Alliance Products.
Brian Bothast developed a fall protection plan checklist that was used in the
Fall Protection training session and was included on the IISC website. Brian
also shared some safety and health compliance checklists and recordkeeping help
sheets that were posted for all members on the IISC website. Brian also provided
Margaret Meade fatality information and she provided the information to members
and non-members via the IISC newsletter.
Results
|
Type of Activity |
Number of Individuals Reached or Trained |
|
Iowa-Illinois Safety Council Professional Development Conference in
Coralville, Iowa |
200 |
|
Downstate Illinois Occ. Safety & Health Conf. |
50 |
|
The Iowa Illinois Safety Council posted a variety of safety and health
compliance checklists for their members on their website |
Unable to track
specific numbers |
|
The Iowa Illinois Safety Council included current year occupational fatality
data supplied by the Peoria OSHA office in the IISC Newsletter |
900 members
350 non-members |
|
TOTAL |
1500 |
- Upcoming Milestones
Brian will be making two presentations at the 2010 Iowa-Illinois Safety Council
Professional Development Conference in Dubuque, Iowa.
There are no plans to renew the alliance at this time.
Report prepared by: Brian Bothast
Fall Protection Plan
|
Standard |
Requirement |
Completed |
|
1926.502(k)(1) |
Has a plan been prepared by a qualified person and developed specifically for
the site where the leading edge work, pre-cast concrete work, or residential
construction work is being performed and maintained up to date? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(2) |
Are any changes to the fall protection plan approved by a qualified person? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(3) |
Is a copy of the fall protection plan with all approved changes maintained at
the job site? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(4) |
Is the implementation of the fall protection plan under the supervision of a
competent person? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(5) |
Does the fall protection plan document the reasons why the use of conventional
fall protection systems (guardrails, personal fall arrest systems, or safety
nets) are infeasible or why their use would create a greater hazard? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(6) |
Does the fall protection plan include a written discussion of other measures
that will be taken to reduce or eliminate the fall hazard for workers who
cannot be provided with protection from the conventional fall protection
systems? (the extent to which scaffolds, ladders, or vehicle mounted work
platforms can be used) |
|
|
1926.502(k)(7) |
Does the fall protection plan identify each location where conventional fall
protection methods cannot be used and classify the locations as controlled
access zones and meet the criteria in paragraph (g) of the standard? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(8) |
When no other measures were implemented, did you implement a safety monitoring
system in conformance with 1926.502(h)? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(9) |
Does the fall protection plan include the names or identification of each
employee designated to work in controlled access zones and prevent other
employees from entering controlled access zones? |
|
|
1926.502(k)(10) |
In the event of an employee fall or some other serious incident, do you
investigate the circumstances of the incident to determine if the fall
protection plan needs to be changed (new practices, procedures, or training)
and implement changes to prevent incidents? |
|
|