OSHA Harwood Grant Training Materials

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Recognizing and fixing hazards are important elements of any safety program. ReMA received grant funding through OSHA’s Susan Harwood Training grant to develop these materials. These course materials have been created to help you learn more about potential hazards in industry. You will find training materials for these classes in both English and Spanish at the links below. They are available for download and use with your workforce. Please work safely, or not at all!

ReMA Safety Services

Hazard Recognition in Recycling

This course was developed in conjunction with the OSHA Susan Harwood grant program. It is relevant to scrap recyclers across all commodities who would like their employees to learn more about hazard recognition and mitigation in the operations environment.

Hazard Recognition around Loading Dock Areas

This course was developed from funding received through OSHA's Susan Harwood grant program. It discusses the importance of finding, recognizing, and fixing hazards in the loading dock and shipping & receiving areas of a business. The material covers mobile equipment safety, control of hazardous energy (lock out tag out), fire safety & housekeeping, hazard communication, and personal protective equipment. These course materials are available for you to download and use with your workforce.

Machine Guarding in Recycling

Machine guarding is one of the tenants of any safety program. ReMA received grant funding through OSHA’s Susan Harwood grant program to develop these materials. 

Hazard Recognition: Fire Safety and Prevention in Recycling

These education and training materials were developed from funding received through OSHA’s Susan Harwood grant program. They focus on Hazard Recognition: Fire Safety and Prevention. This material is designed to help workers, team leads, supervisors, plant managers, and senior leadership to better understand the hazards associated with fires in the scrap recycling and materials recovery facilities (MRF) environments. The objective of these materials is to give the user a better knowledge of the potential fire hazards in their working environment and ways to control these hazards in order to prevent large fires.

Have Questions?

Holly Brownell
Administrative Assistant
hbrownell@isri.org
(202) 662-8515