Confined Space Considerations for the Small Employer
A confined space has limited or restricted means for entry or exit, and it
is not designed for continuous employee occupancy. Confined spaces include, but
are not limited to, underground vaults, tanks, storage bins, manholes, pits,
silos, process vessels, and pipelines.
Small companies have rarely been under greater stress than they are today.
Many employees are taking on new roles while overloaded with duties. I believe
in trusting your employees' ability (that is, trust but verify with training,
assessment, and inspections), yet it is still the employer's responsibility to
implement a sound program if needed and to update it as necessary.
For a small employer just getting started, these are a few items to think
seriously about:
Review
Review the entire confined space issue and the need for a program. If you
aren't qualified to do this, hire a really good safety consultant who is. If
you cannot commit to the program, make sure you have an alternate plan: No
employee ever enters a confined space, and only qualified contractors may
enter, etc.
Site Assessment
Include every potential job duty, routine or not. Inspect the site, interview
employees, review old and new processes, and examine all related programs, such
as heat stress, where confined spaces will be an issue. You have to look at the
hazard, not just the configuration of the work space.
Communication
Be blunt with employees during your education/awareness efforts. Mincing words
here may cost a life. Tell them up front what is at risk and what you plan to
do if they fail to use the program correctly and take chances. Tell them that
dead employee will be them or the person sitting next to them, and if shortcuts
are taken, they will be fired. (Be sure of your authority here, and that you
have the true support of management.)
Outside Resources
Paid consultants aren't the only tool available to you; consider government
resources, college/university programs, video rentals, CD programs, and
customized training sources. Use what works for your industry and the work
you're doing.
Contractors can perform needed confined space work. This is one of the most
cost-effective methods. You subcontract to someone who has the equipment,
knowledge, support framework, and training. Just make sure your employees do
not get involved and assist.
Ensuring Success
Failures of small employers' programs often include:
Doing nothing, because it
is easy to put it off.
Not monitoring for changes
in work situations and new processes. The employer assumes all is well
because it was 10 years ago.
Placing too much trust in
employees' judgment.
Assuming corrective actions
were actually put into place. You have to follow up and make sure the
correct items were purchased, unboxed, trained on, and used.
Inadequate approvals. Make
sure checks are in the program so one person does not make all of the
decisions. You need a checks and balances system in case the wrong person
is calling the shots to save money.
Inadequate equipment.
Atmospheric monitoring devices, rescue equipment, and the rest: How often
is it equipment tested, inspected, and used for employee training? If your
answer is "randomly," you have a time bomb in the making.
As safety professionals, we do make an impact every day. We can effect
change to help employees help themselves, one standard at a time, and return
home safely. With all of the headaches, stress, and hardships we as safety
professionals endure, it is a great reward in an often thankless job.
Confined Space Checklist
Is your workplace
considered a small employer?
Do you have a comprehensive
safety program in place that is usable and updated regularly for all
employees and processes?
Has your workplace been
assessed for the need of a confined space program by a qualified and
competent person or committee?
Has each potential confined
space been labeled by a durable means to ensure any employee, visitor, or
contractor knows it is a confined space? Are labels in multiple languages
if needed?
Do you have a specific
description of each confined space location, process, and hazard
associated with the space so others fully understand the dangers with this
space? (All confined spaces are not the same as the hazards, and your
actions to work safely in them can change.)
Is a management system in
place to ensure proper access and authority to allow entry to confined
spaces?
Do you have a backup
authority system in the event the primary person is on vacation or off
site?
Is there a designated place
on site for all documentation related to the safety program and confined
space documents? Are employees aware of the location, and is it available
24 hours a day?
Do subcontractors work on
your site? Are they made aware in writing of potential confined spaces and
their actions required prior to entry? Are liability and responsibility
explained?
Are emergency plans in
place for rescue and treatment in the event of a confined space injury?
Do you have interaction
with local emergency/rescue teams for assistance if needed? Is this in
writing?
Is all documentation of
your confined space program easy to follow and understand for all levels
of employees, including policy, permit paperwork, labeling of confined
spaces, description of associated hazards with each confined space,
training format, equipment records, monitoring records and logs, and service
documentation?