September17, 2024
Orlando, FL — For the 14th consecutive fiscal year, Fall Protection – General Requirements is OSHA’s most frequently cited standard, the agency and Safety+Health announced during the 2024 NSC Safety Congress & Expo.
Scott Ketcham, director of OSHA’s Directorate of Enforcement Programs, presented the preliminary list – which represents OSHA Information System data from Oct. 1, 2023, to Sept. 5 – and S+H Associate Editor Kevin Druley moderated the session from the Learning Lab on the Expo Floor.
“OSHA takes falls very seriously,” Ketcham said during the presentation. “We’re trying to curb this hazard and make inroads to help people understand the standard and requirements.
“Too many lives are lost each year from workers who fall to their death.”
The standards that comprise the Top 10 remained unchanged from FY 2023. However, movement occurred within the ranking. Respiratory Protection, which ranked seventh in FY 2023, climbed three spots to No. 4. Scaffolding, meanwhile, fell four spots to No. 8.
“What’s more precious than our lungs?” Ketcham asked the audience.
The full list:
Fall Protection – General Requirements (1926.501): 6,307 violations
Hazard Communication (1910.1200): 2,888
Ladders (1926.1053): 2,573
Respiratory Protection (1910.134): 2,470
Lockout/Tagout (1910.147): 2,443
Powered Industrial Trucks (1910.178): 2,248
Fall Protection – Training Requirements (1926.503): 2,050
Scaffolding (1926.451): 1,873
Personal Protective and Lifesaving Equipment – Eye and Face Protection (1926.102): 1,814
Machine Guarding (1910.212): 1,541
“While incredible advancements are made in safety each year, we continue to see many of the same types of violations appear on OSHA’s Top 10 list,” said Lorraine M. Martin, president and CEO of the National Safety Council. “As a safety community, it’s critical we come together to acknowledge these persistent trends and identify solutions to better protect our workforces.”
Immediately after Ketcham’s presentation, Mark Chung, executive vice president of safety leadership and advocacy at NSC, and Ken Kolosh, the council’s statistics manager, presented “The Injuries Behind the Fines.”
Kolosh emphasized that the Bureau of Labor Statistics data be presented isn’t a one-to-one relationship, that it’s provided for illustrative purposes – not benchmarking. He went on to say that the “injuries and fatality events are provided as examples that may be associated with the violation.”
Using the Top 10 list, Chung said the BLS data shows that falls accounted for 865 workplace fatalities in 2022. Of those, 700 were the result of a fall to a lower level.
Other reported causes of death in 2022, per BLS:
Transportation incidents: 2,066
Workplace violence: 865
Overdose: 525
Exposure to electricity: 145
Forklift, order picker, platform truck – Powered: 73
Caught in running equipment or machinery during maintenance or cleaning: 54
Caught in running equipment: 35
“There have been increasing numbers of overdoses,” Chung said. “We need to keep an eye on this and deploy proper countermeasures.”
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