Keep exit routes free of obstructions
Certain areas of a facility can quickly become congested simply due to the movement of boxes or pallets during daily operations. During particularly busy times, safety must not take a backseat to other demands. This is especially true regarding emergency exit routes.
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) frequently cites employers for blocking exit routes. Violations may result from stacking boxes or other materials in an aisle, parking a forklift in front of an exit door, or leaving a mail cart in an exit aisle. Since a blocked exit route could cost lives during an emergency, OSHA cites these violations as “serious” and may impose fines of over $13,000 per violation.
OSHA requires that exit routes be “free and unobstructed” at all times. That means no materials or equipment (pallets, boxes, forklifts) can be placed within an exit route either permanently or temporarily (not even for “just a few minutes”).
Exit routes could be inadvertently blocked during increased production, cleaning, maintenance, or renovation when materials and equipment need to be moved to areas not normally used. During these times, make it a point to check exit routes to ensure that they aren’t blocked. In particular, make sure employees don’t set anything in an exit route, not even for “just a few minutes” because even that temporary obstruction is a violation — and during an emergency, the obstruction could cost lives.




















































