Walking-working Surface Handout
Don’t get tripped up by OSHA’s walking-working surfaces standard
There are many slips, trips, and fall hazards on construction sites. Employers must be proactive to find and fix these workplace hazards BEFORE they become an issue. Exposure to these types of hazards can pose a significant risk of death or serious harm to workers.
Employers can use a fall protection method or system that works best for the work operation. Regular inspections and training will help employers prevent and eliminate walking-working surface hazards.
What is a walking-working surface?
OSHA’s 1926.500(b)(2) says a walking-working surface is a horizontal or vertical surface. For example, it would include floors, roofs, ramps, bridges, runways, formwork, and concrete reinforcing steel but not include ladders, vehicles, or trailers where employees can stand. You must identify and eliminate walking-working surface hazards with proactive measures such as fall protection. Fall protection includes using: covers, designated areas, guardrails, handrails, personal fall protection systems, ladder safety systems, and safety nets.
Employers should perform regular inspections to identify and mitigate slips, trips, and fall hazards.
Things to keep in mind while performing these inspections include:
- Passageways, storerooms, service rooms, and walking-working surfaces must be kept clean, orderly, and sanitary.
- Walking-working surfaces must have a proper load rating to safely support loads applied to it.
- If a corrective action or repair cannot be made immediately, the hazard must be guarded to prevent employees from using the walking-working surface.
- False floors, platforms, and mats must be provided when wet processes are used;
- Hazardous conditions on walking-working surfaces must be corrected or repaired before an employee can use it again.
- Employers must provide safe access and egress to and from walking-working surfaces.
- Protruding objects, loose boards, corrosion, leaks, spills, snow, and ice, are not allowed on walking-working surfaces.
- Only a qualified person can repair structural integrity issues on a walking-working surface.