OSHA Training
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What is OSHA?
In 1970, the United States Congress and President Richard Nixon created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), a national public health agency dedicated to the basic proposition that no worker should have to choose between their life and their job.
Congress created OSHA to assure safe and healthful conditions for working men and women by setting and enforcing standards and providing training, outreach, education and compliance assistance. Under the OSHA law, employers are responsible for providing a safe and healthful workplace for their workers. For more information, visit OSHA’s website at www.osha.gov.
OSHA 30-Hour General Industry Training Course
This OSHA 30-hour General Industry Outreach Training course is a comprehensive safety training program designed for those working within general industry.
Participants receive an OSHA 30-Hour General Industry course completion card in the mail after 1-2 weeks of completing the course.
The OSHA 30-hour courses provide essential information that helps safety committee members, forepersons, supervisors, superintendents, managers, competent persons, safety staff, safety managers, and others monitor workplace safety and implement OSHA health and safety regulations apply to their workplaces.