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The ABCs of PPE

Your roofing contractor’s safety practices are your business.

By Walter C. Fluharty, PSY.D, SPHR, CEES

A commitment to rooftop safety is a way of life in commercial roofing. With falls being the Number 1 cause of fatalities in the construction industry, roofing contractors have learned the importance of maintaining a company-wide commitment to observing the most stringent safety practices while on the roof. And they’re not the only ones.

Building owners and facility managers have also learned that taking an active role in assuring a contractor’s safety can prove to not only decrease a construction project’s expense and duration, but also improve job quality.

When evaluating roofing contractors, review their safety documentation and past performance to ensure they put a premium on protecting their employees from any potential hazards while on a roof. This, in turn, will help assure minimized risk to your employees, tenants and property.

Roofers who just claim a commitment to safety in a brochure isn’t enough. They should be able to back it up with documented jobsite guidelines and show that they literally wear their commitment to safety on their sleeve… and on their head… their hands … their feet, etc. In other words, they always suit up in proper personal protective equipment (PPE).

Safety from Head to Toe…and Beyond

Just like selecting the proper tools for the job, selecting all of the correct PPE plays a critical role in completing the project the right way so everyone on the crew can return home safely at the end of the day.

Contractors who develop a PPE program and follow it with reinforcement, discipline and consistency are a credit to the roofing industry. These programs should address what types of PPE shall be worn and how employees will be trained to use it. Further, it should account for how PPE will be cleaned, maintained and properly discarded.

Below are the fundamentals of PPE any contractor you hire should be using when working on your commercial roof.

As a building owner or facility manager, you want to make sure safety — from the appropriate PPE detailed, documented protocols — is a critical item on the checklist for all of your construction projects before they begin.

— Walter C. Fluharty, a 30-year veteran of the safety industry, is the vice president of Environmental Health and Safety & Organizational Development for Simon Roofing, one of the largest and longest-operating national commercial roofing manufacturers/contractors in the United States.

 

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