Use the right philosophy to address falls on your jobsite
There are two main philosophies to protecting workers from falls:
- Fall prevention
- Fall protection
Employers should use fall prevention controls to prevent workers from falling. If such controls aren’t sufficient in preventing falls from happening, then use fall protection devices and systems as a last resort to protect workers.
Studies show humans take 1/3 of a second to become aware of something and another 1/3 of a second to realize something is happening — the action beats reaction principle. Before a worker becomes aware to react, they’ve fallen about 7 feet. Considering this, it’s critical to take steps to prevent falls from occurring.
OSHA’s Duty to Have Fall Protection standard in construction, section 1926.501, provides requirements that fulfill OSHA’s intention to prevent injuries and fatalities stemming from falls.
The standard states each employee on a walking-working surface with an unprotected side or edge that is six feet or more above a lower level must be protected from falling by using:
- Guardrail systems,
- Safety net systems, or
- Personal fall arrest systems.
Personal fall arrest and safety net systems are fall protection devices, not fall prevention controls. Effective controls include:
- Guardrails,
- Restraint/positioning devices,
- Warning lines,
- Controlled access zones, and
- Safety monitors.
OSHA’s Commonly Used Statistics webpage continues identifying “falls” as one of the “fatal four” leading causes of private sector deaths in construction. Fall protection standards continue being commonly cited violations by OSHA each year.
Even though fall-related incidents, injuries, fatalities, and violations are trending downward, recent OSHA enforcement actions suggest it’s not enough. Contractors need to take additional steps to preventing falls, rather than only providing fall protection devices to their workers.
Key to remember: Eliminate fall hazards on the jobsite. If eliminating falls isn’t possible, consider using fall protection devices like personal fall arrest systems.