OSHA's annual training requirements--what you need to know
At the start of a new year, many employers look to what annual training OSHA requires. The following OSHA general industry rules include annual retraining or employee information requirements:
- Access to employee exposure and medical records — 1910.1020(g)(1) [employee information]
- Bloodborne pathogens -1910.1030(g)(2)(ii)(C) [and 1910.1030(e)(2)(ii)(M) for HIV and HBV research and production facilities]
- Fire brigades — 1910.156(c)(2) and Appendix A, paragraph 5
- Fixed extinguishing systems — 1910.160(b)(10)
- Grain handling facilities — 1910.272(e)(1)
- Hazardous waste operations and emergency response (HAZWOPER) — 1910.120(e)(8), (p)(7)(i) and (ii), (p)(8)(ii)(C), (q)(5), (q)(8)(i), and Appendix C.2 (training)
- Mechanical power presses — 1910.217(h)(13)(i) [applies to PSDI operation mode]
- Occupational noise exposure — 1910.95(k)(2)
- Permit-required confined spaces — 1910.146(k)(2)(iv) [practice rescue drills]
- Portable fire extinguishers — 1910.157(g)(2) and (g)(4)
- Respiratory protection — 1910.134(k)(5)
In addition, the chemical-specific regulations in Subpart Z require annual training. The only chemical-specific Subpart Z regulations that do not require annual retraining are: 1910.1002 — coal tar pitch volatiles, 1910.1026 — hexavalent chromium, 1910.1052 — methylene chloride, 1910.1053 — respirable crystalline silica, and 1910.1096 — ionizing radiation (but the employer must advise employees of their ionizing radiation monitoring results annually).
Finally, the process safety management standard (1910.119 for general industry) requires training every three years.
The training requirements in 1910 apply to all types of general industry facilities but depend on whether the circumstances apply to your company/employees. For example, if no employees are at risk of occupational exposure to bloodborne pathogens or if no one is required to wear respiratory protection, training is not required in those areas.
Also, keep in mind that if you’re located in an OSHA state plan state, there may be additional training requirements.