OSHA Construction Industry Training Requirements
Many standards promulgated by OSHA explicitly require the employer to train (or instruct, or communicate, or inform . . .) employees in the safety and health aspects of their jobs. Other OSHA standards make it the employer’s responsibility to limit certain job assignments to employees who are “certified,” “competent,” or “qualified” – meaning that they have had special training, qualifying them to preform a specific task or duty. Also, the term “designated” personnel means selected or assigned by the employer or the employer’s representative as being qualified to perform specific duties.
The OSHA training requirements listed below have been excerpted from Title 29, Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), Part 1926 for Construction. Some Administrative standards (Parts 1903 and 1904) and General Industry standards (Part 1910) apply to the Construction Industry as well (see list at bottom of this page). Note that additional training requirements may appear in certain other consensus standards (ANSI, NFPA, etc.) incorporated by reference in the various parts of the OSHA CFR, and are therefore mandatory.
Construction Industry Training Requirements
1926.20 – General Safety and Health Provisions
1926.21 – Safety Training and Education
1926.33 – Access to Employee Exposure and Medical Records*
1926.35 – Employee Emergency Action Plans
1925.50 – Medical Services and First Aid
1926.53 – Ionizing Radiation
1926.54 – Non-ionizing Radiation
1926.55 – Gases, Vapors, Fumes, Dusts, and Mists
1926.59 – Hazard Communication*
1926.60 – Methylenedianiline
1926.62 – Lead
1926.64 – Process Safety Management
1926.65 – Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response
1926.101 – Hearing Protection
1926.103 – Respiratory Protection*
1926.150 – Fire Protection
1926.201 – Signaling
1926.202 – Barricades
1926.302 – Powder-Operated Hand Tools
1926.304 – Woodworking Tools
1926.350 – 1926.354 – Welding and Cutting
1926.404 – Wiring Design and Protection
1926.451 – 1926.454 – Scaffolding
1926.500 – 1926.503 – Fall Protection
1926.551 – Helicopters
1926.552 – Material Hoists, Personnel Hoists, and Elevators
1926.602 – Material Handling Equipment
1926.604 – Site Clearing
1926.650 – 1926.652 – Excavations
1926.700 – 1926.706 – Concrete and Masonry Construction
1926.750 – 1926.761 – Steel Erection
1926.800 – 1926.804 – Underground Construction, Caissons, Cofferdams, and Compressed Air
1926.850 – 1926.860 – Demolition
1926.900 – 1926.914 – Blasting and the Use of Explosives
1926.950 – 1926.960 – Power Transmission and Distribution
1926.1050 – 1926.1060 – Ladders (and Stairways)
1926.1071 – 1926.1091 – Commercial Diving Operations*
1926.1101 – Asbestos
1926.1103 – 1926.1016 – Thirteen Carcinogens*
1926.1117 – Vinyl Chloride*
1926.1118 – Inorganic Arsenic*
1926.1126 – Chromium (VI)
1926.1127 – Cadmium
1926.1128 – Benzene*
1926.1129 – Coke Oven Emissions*
1926.1144 – 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane*
1926.1145 – Acrylonitrile*
1926.1147 – Ethylene Oxide*
1926.1148 – Formaldehyde*
1926.1152 – Methylene Chloride*
1926.1200 – 1926.1013 – Confined Spaces in Construction
1926.1400 – 1926.1442 – Cranes & Derricks in Construction
1926.1500 – 1926.1501 – Cranes and Derricks Used in Demolition and Underground Construction
* The OSHA Construction standards listed above that have been marked with an asterisk (*) are identical to those set forth in the General Industry standard with the same name in Part 1910.
ADMINISTRATIVE REQUIREMENTS
1903.2 – Posting of Notice; Availability of the Act, Regulations and Applicable Standards
1904.35 – Injury and Illness Recordkeeping Requirements – Employee Involvement
GENERAL INDUSTRY STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY
The following General Industry standards also apply to the Construction industry:
1910.179(l) – Operator Training for Powered Industrial Trucks (forklifts)
1910.1020 – Access to Employee Exposure and Medical Records
1910.1030 – Bloodborne Pathogens
ADDITIONAL NOTE: The OSHA Construction standards listed above that have been marked with an asterisk (*) are identical to those set forth in the General Industry standard with the same name in Part 1910.
See our page for Cal/OSHA Standards (regulations)