SafetyInfo.com

9000 Page Safety Library
"Simply the best safety value on the internet"  R. Ilaw,  OSHA Regional Director (Retired)
Home             SUBSCRIBE      |       Members       |       Guests       |       VIDEO Store       |       SurviveAbide       |       Contact       |    About


Construction Safety Inspection Forms

Use these construction safety inspection forms for supervisor or safety committee inspections.  Construction Safety Inspection Forms provide a close look at construction sites, equipment and construction safety practices. Construction accounts for more fatal work injuries, than most of any industry sector.  Two occupational groups (construction and extraction occupations and transportation and material moving occupations) together account for nearly half of all fatal work injuries..


Sample Forms

Contractor Safety Assessment Form

Construction Ladder & Scaffold Safety Inspection Form

Construction Forms in the Members Area

Contractor Safety Assessment
Job Site General
Barricades
Blasting
Concrete & Masonry
Demolition
Electrical
Excavation & Shoring
Fire Prevention
Flammable Liquids & Material
Hazard Communication
Heavy Equipment
Hoists, Cranes & Derricks
Housekeeping & Sanitation
Ladders & Scaffolds
Material Handling & Storage
Personal Protective Equipment
Road Work
Site Security
Tool Inspections
Vehicle Inspections
Welding, Cutting & Brazing

 

  ... additional information on Construction Safety

Construction accounted for 1,239 fatal work injuries, the most of any industry sector in 2006. The total for construction represented an increase of 3 percent over the 2005 total. Fatalities among specialty trade contractors rose 6 percent due primarily to higher numbers of fatal work injuries among building finishing contractors and roofing contractors.

Two occupational groups (construction and extraction occupations and transportation and material moving occupations) together accounted for nearly half of all fatal work injuries.

Construction laborers accounted for the highest number of fatal work injuries among construction and extraction occupations, accounting for 360 fatal work injuries. Fatalities among electricians, roofers, painters, and drywall and ceiling tile installers also rose. Fatalities decreased among carpenters, construction trade helpers, and among plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters.

Construction hazards
Construction is one of the largest and most dangerous industries in the United States. Bodily harm as a result of misusing equipment or through plain negligence can range anywhere from cuts and scrapes to loss of sight or limbs and even death. Because of all the hazards a construction worker encounters in a typical day, injuries occur regularly. And of those injuries, eye injuries, in particular, are the most common.


What causes eye injuries
Two main reasons for construction site eye injuries on the job are: not wearing eye protection or wearing the wrong kind of eye protection for the job. Not wearing eye protection is obviously dangerous. What most workers don't realize, however, is that wearing the wrong kind of eye protection can be just as hazardous. In fact, most workers who have suffered eye injuries while wearing protective eyewear realize later that the trauma was inflicted from objects or chemicals going around or under their ill-fitting safety eyewear.

Unfortunately for construction workers, their line of work puts them in contact with just about every eye hazard known to the safety industry: impact, ultraviolet radiation, liquid splash and infrared radiation. Many construction tasks generate flying debris which can seriously injure the eyes. From wood and paint chips to dirt, concrete particles and even nails, a construction worker's eyes are constantly and most often at risk from impact hazards. Injuries from ultraviolet radiation (UV), liquid splash, and infrared radiation (IR) occur also but are notas common.

If you work in outdoor construction sites, UV rays are present in ordinary sunlight and can cause great damage to the eyes. Because construction often takes workers both indoors and out, workers in this industry often don't see this hazard as a serious one. Construction workers also come in contact with highly toxic cleaning chemicals, paints and adhesives. For this reason, liquid/chemical splash hazards are prevalent. Contact from these substances can cause momentary vision loss or even blindness, not to mention burning and discomfort in the eyes.

Last but not least is infrared radiation. The torch welding and cutting that construction workers do produces an invisible hazard that can damage the cornea and retina of the eye. In extreme cases, it causes blindness.

Safety Discount Shop

 

Videos & Software
Lowest Prices Guaranteed
Free Shipping
 & Handling in USA

Best Buy
15 Industrial Safety
 Videos $36.69 each

Manufacturing Package
Substitute up to 5 videos
with any Digital 2000 videos
priced at $99.95 or less

15 Construction Safety
Videos $39.67 each

Select any 15 Construction
Safety Videos from list
of 56 safety videos


Safety Signs
& Labels


Discount Safety
Equipment

100,000 Products