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Job Safety Analysis*. JSA. 29 CFR 1910.132 December 2009. *Also referred to as Job Hazard Analysis (JHA). Ask yourself these questions. Can my employees be injured by being exposed to something or by performing this task How can I protect them from a recognized hazard
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Job Safety Analysis* JSA 29 CFR 1910.132 December 2009 *Also referred to as Job Hazard Analysis (JHA)
Ask yourself these questions • Can my employees be injured by being exposed to something or by performing this task • How can I protect them from a recognized hazard • What parts of the body need protecting
Why create a JSA • Required by OSHA under PPE standard (1910.132(d)(1) and 1910.132(d)(2) • First step in creating a safety program • Great training tool • Can refer to JSA document later for additional training or discipline
Name some hazards the body could be exposed to during a task
Name some hazards the body could be exposed to during a task Burn Cut Residue Lifting Slip Falling Object Splash Noise Fall Abrasion Bump Inhalation Bruise Flying particles
Occupation: • Hockey Player Hazard: • Fighting • Flying Objects • Slash • Check Body Part: • Teeth • Head (concussion) • Face PPE: • Helmet • Padding • Mouth Guard
Injury Sustained Loss of Teeth
Mushroom Farm Jobs Loader operator Peat mixing room Turner operator Food safety coordinator Maintenance Pack Line operator Grower Line supervisor Assistant grower Wash Line • Set probes Scale operator • Set up steamer Shipping manager Water applicator Tractor Trailer operator Truck driver Filling crew bed maker Harvesting foreman Board turner Harvester Casing buggy operator Basket catcher Casing leveler Sweeper Cleanout with shovel Pallet jack operator Welder
For each job performed create a JSA • Job Title: Water applicator • Location of job duties: Whole farm • Analysis done by: Bobby Clark • Date: 4/29/2010
Better to prevent hazard than to use PPE • Work place practices: eliminate the hazard by eliminating the job or not using humans in the process • Engineering Controls: make a water nozzle have a longer handle to water top bed instead of climbing a ladder. • Control the hazard: guard rails or machine guarding essentially putting a barrier between user and hazard • Use PPE