Define a pedestrian in the workplace
Recognize common pedestrian workplace hazards
Identify hazard prevention strategies
Understand slips, trips, and falls and their prevention
Identify high-visibility safety apparel
Pedestrian hazards in the workplace pose significant risks, as even routine walking can lead to serious injury or death. Pedestrian workers include employees, visitors, or members of the public in work areas, such as construction sites, warehouses, or parking lots. In fact, from 2018 to 2022, over 2,200 pedestrian workers were killed after being struck by vehicles or mobile equipment. In this training, you will learn how to identify and mitigate common hazards for pedestrians in the workplace and what steps can be taken to protect workers on their feet.
Slips, trips, and falls are major causes of workplace injuries and fatalities. They result from low friction, excessive momentum, or imbalance due to gravity. Preventive measures include walking carefully on slippery surfaces, keeping walkways clear of obstructions, using proper footwear, and promptly reporting hazards. OSHA guidelines require clean, dry, and safe walking surfaces, proper drainage, and regular inspections. Pedestrian workers should also follow all signage to avoid unsafe conditions.
Equipment-related accidents are another concern. Operators should yield to pedestrians, use spotters, sound horns at blind corners, and maintain safe clearance from loads. Pedestrians must stay in designated walkways and wear PPE, including hard hats when needed and high-visibility safety apparel. Following these practices helps reduce risks from slips, trips, falls, vehicle interactions, and falling objects, ensuring pedestrian safety in all workplace environments.
This course will help you understand common hazards for pedestrians in the workplace and what can be done to keep workers safe. Pedestrians should stay alert, avoid distractions like phones, and remain within clearly marked pedestrian zones. Employers must maintain well-lit areas, clearly mark pedestrian routes, provide barriers where needed, and ensure vehicle warning systems function properly. By working together, employees and employers can keep all pedestrians safe!
This program is available with Spanish and French closed captions.
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HVSA refers to clothing that contains both reflective tape and fluorescent colors, like yellow and orange, that make pedestrians in the workplace easy to see.
They are caused by low friction, excessive momentum, or loss of balance due to gravity, often triggered by wet surfaces, obstacles, or improper footwear.
Walk carefully on slippery surfaces, take short steps, keep walkways clear, use proper footwear, and report hazards promptly.
Crossing guards, road construction workers, law enforcement officers, tow truck drivers, refuse collection workers, building construction workers, and agricultural workers.
Yes, 29 CFR 1910.22 discusses regulations on employer responsibilities for walking-working surfaces.
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