Safety Recordkeeping: Maintaining Records that Pass Inspection and Build a Strong Safety Culture
Safety Recordkeeping Webinar Recording
When thinking about OSHA recordkeeping requirements, it’s easy to default to the OSHA 300 and 301 logs. But your recordkeeping requirements don’t end there.
What about training records? Exposure records? Testing records? Do you know what data you need to record? Do you know how long you need to retain each document?
Join us for a fast-paced 90-minute webinar, when we’ll provide practical, real-world answers to your OSHA recordkeeping questions. Our expert speaker – a safety expert who’s also a lawyer - will give you sound, effective tips for creating a recordkeeping and retention trail that will get you through the OSHA maze and help you reap the benefits of a safer workplace and safer workforce.
You and your colleagues will learn:
- The records you must keep for statutory compliance
- Additional records recommended for best practices
- OSHA’s new emphasis on recordkeeping enforcement - and what they will be looking for
- Risks and exposures you face by not having complete and accurate records
- What records must be produced for an OSHA inspection - and what can and should be shielded
- How your records help you improve safe practices and employee performance
- Practical suggestions on how to maintain records that will pass inspection - without spending a ton of time on it
This webinar was recorded on Thursday, March 1, 2012
Safety Recordkeeping: Maintaining Records that Pass Inspection and Build a Strong Safety Culture
About Your Speaker:
Adele Abrams, Esq., CMSP, REA is an attorney recognized as a national expert on occupational safety and health. She represents employers and contractors nationwide in OSHA and MSHA litigation and workers’ compensation cases, and provides safety and health training and consultation services. She is a Certified Mine Safety Professional, a Department of Labor-approved trainer, and a trained mediator. She is also a professional member of the American Society of Safety Engineers, the International Society of Mine Safety Professionals, and the Energy and Mineral Law Foundation. She is chair of the National Safety Council’s Business & Industry Division committee on regulatory and legal affairs.
