Pro tips from a weathered safety professional
OSHA doesn’t always clarify its standards, guidance documents, or resources. When I was a safety manager in the field, I found that some of the best advice came from pro tips. I was first introduced to pro tips when I was a young kid.
I was fascinated with Norb Abram’s The New Yankee Workshop and Bob Vila’s This Old House television shows. I love the pro tips these veterans of the trade provided. I used to buy do-it-yourselfer and how-to books with my allowance money, but the information was nothing compared to the pro tips Norm and Bob would give. When I became a safety manager, I found the same to be true. There were many first-time moments that I hadn’t seen before. I was shy to ask too many questions, not wanting to appear incompetent. I started reaching out to my network of peers and other resources where I could get a bird’s-eye-view of what to do.
Nowadays, industry guidance is called “best management practices” (BMPs). BMPs are great, but they have their limits. Something becomes a BMP after it has been in the wash cycle for a while and had an opportunity to become “kid-tested, mother approved.” Pro tips are real, raw guidance from workers who have been there and done it before. Its guidance developed from a labor of love, necessity, and amid chaos.
With these variables, there’s little time to impart opinions and stereotypes at that moment. I heard someone once compare a pro tip to diamond formation. They said that diamonds are formed under significant amounts of heat and pressure. It’s something highly valued and sought after in society today. The same holds true about pro tips. Usually, the best pro tips come from challenging conditions while under pressure.
One of the problem areas for me was when I was getting my feet wet in the safety industry were excavation safety and sampling confined spaces. In the beginning, I was always fumbling over small issues that were very frustrating. I had good mentors along the way, but many of them were not experienced with the technical side of safety when I got into the business. They had experience as tradespeople and could talk about the work in detail, but we gained experience on technical safety issues together.
Years later, these safety topics remain hot issues in the industry. I’ve put together some of my pro tips and included some other newsworthy issues that will be helpful for your jobsite.



















































