Upload
trinhkiet
View
213
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
PO Box 5640Salem, OR 97304-0640
This conference is a joint effort of the Central Oregon Safety & Health Association (COSHA) and Oregon OSHA/DCBS.
September 19 & 20, 2017
Riverhouse on the Deschutes • Bend, Oregon
Register online: safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
The Impact of an Injury: What are You Risking?
by Gary Norland
2
Registration
Early registration is encouraged, as class space is limited. Registrations are accepted by mail and by fax. If you are faxing registrations, be sure to fax both sides of the form. Faxes are only accepted if accompanied by credit card information or a purchase order. If space is available, you may register at the conference. Please call 503-947-7411 for session availability.
Pre-registration deadline September 12, 2017
Complete the enclosed registration form and send it with your check or fax it with credit card information or a purchase order to:
Central Oregon Conference PO Box 5640 Salem, OR 97304-0640
Fax: 503-947-7019
You can also register online at safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
An e-mail address is required for confirmation.
Questions?
Call the Conference Section, 503-947-7411 or toll-free, 888-292-5247, option 1,
or e-mail [email protected]
General Information
Riverhouse on the Deschutes
For room reservations, call:
3075 U.S. 97 Business Bend, OR 97701
866-453-4480
Lodging
Attendees are responsible for making their own lodging arrangements.
Register online! safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
Refunds
All cancellations must be received seven working days prior to event. After that date, no refunds are granted. A substitution of attendees is allowed. Registrants who do not attend the conference are required to pay in full. You can call 503-947-7411, or e-mail [email protected].
Thank you to the Oregon Fire Chiefs Association Safety & Health Section for their generous donation and assistance creating the fire service track.
A block of rooms is reserved at the Riverhouse on the Deschutes Hotel. All reservations received after August 19, 2017, are accepted only if space is available. Mention that you are attending the Central Oregon Safety & Health Conference.
Join the networking event at Sawyer Park in Bend!In conjunction with the Central Oregon Occupational Safety & Health Conference,
guests of the conference may join the private networking event. Tuesday, September 19, 2017, from 6-8 p.m.
Cost is $10 per person — advance reservations and payment are required Fee includes voucher for food truck.
Co-sponsored by Deschutes Brewery
Sign up and pay when you register to attend the conference, or call 503-947-7411 for other options.
RATE: $105 per night plus taxMore information can be found at www.riverhouse.com
3
Schedule at a glance
Tuesday, September 197:30 a.m. Registration opens for Pre-Conference Workshops
8-11:30 a.m. PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS
• Empowering New Team Members for Success• Developing and Implementing an Industrial
Hygiene Program• Flourishing Safety Committees• Stress First Aid• Tools for Conscious Leadership: Shifting Out of
Drama• First Aid/CPR/AED
11 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Registration opens for the Conference
11:30 a.m.-1:15 p.m. Lunch (provided) and Opening and Keynote: The Impact of an Injury, What are You Risking?
1:15-2 p.m. Dessert with the Exhibitors and Lucky Numbers activity
1:15-4 p.m. Exhibits open
2-3:30 p.m. SESSION 1
• Seeing Isn’t Always Believing: Recognizing Hazards in Your Workplace
• Machine Guarding• Your Compass: Navigate and Understand
Occupational Medicine and Work Comp• Keeping Your Members Motivated: Creative
Wellness/Fitness Programs for Fire Departments• The Invisible Menace: An Overview of the
Chemical Hazards Associated with Fermentation in the Beverage Industry
• Fleet Management
3:30-4 p.m. Break and Visit Exhibits
4-5:30 p.m. SESSION 2
• I’m on the Safety Committee, Now What?• Confined Space: Elements of an Effective Program• Simple Solutions for Workplace Ergonomics• Firefighter Injury Prevention through
Biomechanics Training• Robotics Safety in the Craft Beverage Industry• Compliance Elements of a Hearing Conservation
Program
Wednesday, September 20
7:30 a.m. Registration opens
7:30-8:15 a.m. Breakfast and Prizes with Exhibitors
8:15-8:45 a.m. Visit Exhibits
8:15-11 a.m. Exhibits open
8:45-10:15 a.m. SESSION 3
• The Power Trio: People Skills for Improving Performance (8:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m.)
• Compliance Elements of a Lockout/Tagout Program
• Hiring Right• How Training Impacts Safety• Understanding the Regulations and Working in
Partnership with Regulators for Compliance and Sustainability
• What Do You Mean the Hazard Communication Rule is about Chemicals?
10:15-11 a.m. Break and Visit Exhibits; Lucky Numbers activity (concludes)
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. SESSION 4
• The Power Trio: People Skills for Improving Performance (continued from 8:45 a.m.)
• Electrical Safety for Non-Electricians• Recordable/Reportable or Both?• Workplace Health and Safety in the Cannabis
Industry • Introduction to Air Permit Requirements in Oregon• Respiratory Protection Programs
12:30-1:30 p.m. Lunch (provided)
1:30-4:30 p.m. SESSION 5
• The Power Trio: People Skills for Improving Performance (continued from 8:45 a.m.)
• Safety-at-Heights: Fall Protection• PPE: How Do You Know What You Need?• Safety Committee: Accident Investigation• Hazardous Waste Basics and Ins and Outs of the
Hazardous Substance Information Survey• Cannabis – Seeing the Forest through the Trees
2:45 -3 p.m. Break
4
Tuesday, September 19
7:30 a.m. Registration opens for Pre-Conference Workshops
8-11:30 a.m. PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS
Empowering New Team Members for Success
In this workshop, Deschutes Brewery representatives discuss building an onboarding program and share on boarding ideas, training tools, and techniques that help new team members flourish.
Kristen CampbellTraining Coordinator, Deschutes Brewery, Bend
Mike JervisSafety Manager, Deschutes Brewery, Bend
Sean PurdyPackaging Training & Development Lead, Deschutes Brewery, Bend
Developing and Implementing an Industrial Hygiene Program
This workshop is designed to help companies better understand the kind of performance expected of an industrial hygiene program operating at a SHARP or even VPP level. The session covers the required activities pertaining to various workplaces, but also shares a lot of industry best practices. Attendees come away with an improved understanding of what a good industrial hygiene program can do to strengthen your company.
Mark HurlimanVPP/SHARP Program Coordinator, Oregon OSHA, Medford
Trena VanDeHeyTechnical, Standards, and Appeals Manager, Oregon OSHA, Salem
Flourishing Safety Committees
This workshop includes:• Safety Committee accomplishments: setting annual goals,
acknowledging progress;• Networking: ideas;• Generating ideas and enthusiasm: how to create room for fun
within a serious topic; and • Mentoring: guiding not guarding.
Barbara Aguon, ARMSafety Manager, Portland Parks & Recreation, Portland
Demetra StarCorporate Safety Director, Fortis Construction, Portland
Stress First Aid
Stress First Aid for Firefighters and Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Personnel was developed to assist firefighters and EMS providers in taking care of each other and to offer a flexible set of tools for addressing stress reactions in firefighters and rescue personnel. It is intended to help members and leaders offer assistance to fire and EMS personnel, to prevent the progression of stress reactions, and to bridge affected individuals to more formal treatment when required.
Michael DismoreChaplain, Central Oregon Public Safety Chaplaincy, Redmond
Tools for Conscious Leadership: Shifting Out of Drama
Creating the best in leaders requires expanding into new behaviors and skill sets. Our ability to build relationships between people in the workplace is essential at all levels. When these relationships break down, information is withheld, immovable positions are taken, and interpersonal dramas escalate. The ability for individuals and teams to take healthy responsibility for how they show up and how they hold themselves and each other accountable is essential to sustaining organizational excellence. This program provides proven strategies to reduce drama, value human needs, and increase organizational performance. • Learn how to recognize and shift out of the Persecutor,
Rescuer, and Victim positions in the drama triangle• Develop strategies for stepping into healthy responsibility• Explore the benefits of taking personal responsibility
Dan MillerPresident, Dan Miller & Associates, Bend
Session Descriptions
Topics of interest for...
Safety Committees
Cannabis Industry
Fire/Emergency Services
Environmental Concerns
5
Tuesday, September 19, continued
First Aid/CPR/AED
MEDIC First Aid BasicPlus is a combined adult CPR, AED, and first aid training program designed specifically for the occupational first aid provider. This extremely flexible program helps employers meet OSHA and other federal and state regulatory requirements for training employees how to respond and care for medical emergencies at work.The program is based upon the 2010 International Consensus on Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) and Emergency Cardiovascular Care (ECC) Science with Treatment Recommendations (CoSTR) and other evidence-based treatment recommendations.
Toby HolbornOwner, Holborn Safety, Woodland, Washington
11:15 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Registration open for the Conference
11:30 a.m.-Noon Lunch (provided)
Noon-12:15 p.m. Opening
Niki Fisher, Conference Co-Chair
Heath Foott, Conference Co-Chair
Julie Love, Deputy Administrator, Oregon OSHA
12:15-1:15 p.m. GENERAL SESSION
Keynote: The Impact of an Injury, What are You Risking?
Have you considered your family, coworkers, and/or community? There is a ripple effect! Gary’s message and story is straight from the heart and he tells it like it is. He shares his real life safety experience about being electrocuted by 12,500 volts along with a PowerPoint presentation full of life changing photos of himself after his accident. He also shares video of the impact his injury has had on those closest to him.
Gary’s mission is to explain the reality of life after an accident and the importance of taking safety seriously. Life as Gary knew it changed in less than a second when he suffered an injury that could have been prevented. Gary explains how his choice to avoid the use of proper safety equipment and rushing the clock cost him his independence.
Gary NorlandCreator of “The Impact of an Injury” and the S.A.F.E.T.Y. concept
1:15-4 p.m. Exhibits open and Lucky Numbers activity
1:15-2 p.m. Dessert with the Exhibitors
2-3:30 p.m. SESSION 1
Seeing Isn’t Always Believing: Recognizing Hazards in Your Workplace
What you don’t recognize as a hazard can hurt you. Hazards can be found anywhere you look including your workplace, your home, and other environments. This interactive training is meant not only to help you recognize safety hazards and understand how to control them in your workplace, but also provide you with training tools you can use to help others within your organization anticipate and recognize hazards.
Julia Means, CSPSenior Safety Management Consultant, SAIF Corporation, Bend
Machine Guarding
This session describes the hazards from many different types of machinery and equipment, and the primary OSHA requirements for machine guarding. In addition, a review of hazardous energy control (Lockout/Tagout) and industry consensus standards such as ANSI and ISO are also provided.
Craig HamelundEducation Specialist, Oregon OSHA, Tigard
Register online! safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
Session Descriptions
6
Tuesday, September 19, continued
Your Compass: Navigate and Understand Occupational Medicine and Work Comp
It’s daunting. Plain and simple. Your employee is injured on the job, what do you need to do and what should you expect from any health care provider? How can you get your employee back to work and avoid lost time? Dr. Wattenburg gives you a look from the doc’s perspective.Have you been putting off your drug-screening program for months, wondering why employment physicals might benefit you, dealing with Hazmat without a Hep B program, or wondering what to expect on a DOT or FAA physical and worried about not passing? Not a problem, we discuss what to expect when you are setting up a program, tips on what you will need to get started, and how to make it efficient. This presentation is appropriate for any business owner with employees, safety managers, HR managers, and employees. Dr. Wattenburg and Deb are looking forward to making your life easier.
Dr. Eric WattenburgOwner/Doctor, Your Care, Redmond
Debora WattenburgOwner, Operations Director, Your Care, Redmond
Keeping Your Members Motivated: Creative Wellness/Fitness Programs for Fire Departments
This presentation discusses how to keep your members motivated to improve their health and fitness through creative wellness and fitness programs and incentives. Ways to obtain equipment, develop incentive programs, and form community partnerships with fitness facilities and colleges are discussed. This presentation also reviews recent statistics involving firefighter injury and death related to firefighter wellness/fitness as well as how you can utilize NFPA 1582 and 1583 to help you justify your programs within your agencies.
Katy JohnsonCaptain/Paramedic, Lane Fire Authority, Eugene
The Invisible Menace: An Overview of the Chemical Hazards Associated with Fermentation in the Beverage Industry
Who should attend? Anyone who works with or is involved with the craft beer, winery and/or micro distillery industries. Attendees leave with a comprehensive overview of the various distilling processes identified as a potential health risk. Topics covered are carbon dioxide to sulfur dioxide, exposures to the hazards of noise and welding, and everything in between. This session helps you better understand hazards enabling more informed decisions during hazard assessments.
Mike JervisSafety Manager, Deschutes Brewery, Bend
Cory Stengel, CSHMOccupational Health Consultant, Industrial Hygienist, Oregon OSHA, Bend
Fleet Management
Your vehicles and drivers provide you valuable resources and tools to accomplish your business and distribute your goods to market. Those same resources can be the source of considerable risk and costs. In this session, we review some of the major issues facing Fleet Management and reducing your risk of loss and your overall cost of risk.
Tim Clarke, MLS, CPCU, AICSenior Vice President of Claims & Risk Services, Brown & Brown Northwest, Portland
3:30-4 p.m. Break and Visit Exhibits
4-5:30 p.m. SESSION 2
I’m on the Safety Committee, Now What?
Did you volunteer or were you ‘directed’ to volunteer to serve on your safety committee? Well, whether you volunteered or were ‘volunTOLD’, this lively session provides insight into the importance of a safety committee along with some helpful tools and suggestions to make your meetings more productive, inspections more effective, and how the committee helps to enhance a positive safety and health culture in your workplace.
Craig HamelundEducation Specialist, Oregon OSHA, Tigard
Session Descriptions
Topics of interest for...
Safety Committees
Cannabis Industry
Fire/Emergency Services
Environmental Concerns
7
Confined Space: Elements of an Effective Program
What are the characteristics of an effective confined space policy or program? In this session, intended for all audiences, we explain the role of a written confined space program and review several sample programs to see how well they achieve the intent of Oregon OSHA’s confined space rules. We also examine requirements governing written entry procedures, particularly as they relate to the use of alternate entry procedures.
James JohnsonCEO, D2000 Safety, Inc., Eugene
Simple Solutions for Workplace Ergonomics
Regardless of industry, sprains and strains are one of the leading causes of workplace injuries. This training helps assist the everyday worker, safety committee members, and/or employers in identifying and understanding ergonomic risk factors.
Julia Means, CSPSenior Safety Management Consultant, SAIF Corporation, Bend
Firefighter Injury Prevention through Biomechanics Training
The project consists of assessing firefighters performing critical tasks, determining the critical movement sets within those tasks, developing and administering a job-specific Functional Movement Screen (FMS) (assessment) to measure each individual’s biomechanical tendencies, and for those with deficiencies, prescribing specific therapeutic exercise patterns to be accomplished regularly (per Rx), with a follow up to assess the improvement. Periodic FMS is administered to ensure improvements are permanent. Additionally, the project calls for a professional assessment of worker-equipment interaction on a biomechanical scale, with recommendations for equipment placement, arrangement and modification, and/or worker training in the proper and safe handling and use of the equipment (from a biomechanical perspective). The assessment extends to the existing workout equipment, to ensure it is safe and effective to use, with recommendations for replacement or recommendations for safe practices.
Tuesday, September 19, continued
Register online! safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
In addition, the program calls for physical therapists to present occasional clinics and drop-in advice, so those nagging aches and pains don’t turn into a real injury.Effectiveness of the project is measured by declining annual injury trends, by rate of injury, by claims costs, and by time loss days. Other measurements include a higher rate of employees using the workout facilities and a rise, over time, in mean Functional Movement Screen scores.
Nicholas Hagen, PT, DPT, CFMT, SCS, CSCSClinic Manager, Rebound Physical Therapy, Bend
Dave Howe, EMT-B Battalion Chief, Bend Fire Department, Bend
Robotics Safety in the Craft Beverage Industry
From this presentation attendees learn a brief history of robotics in the workplace and walk away with an understanding of different robot types, regulations put in place to ensure worker safety around robots, and a robotics safety program foundation for implementation in the workplace.
Nathan ScottAssociate Consultant, BSI EHS Services and Solutions, Beaverton
Compliance Elements of a Hearing Conservation Program
This training covers the basic elements of a Hearing Conservation Program. These elements covered include noise monitoring, hearing protectors, anatomy and physiology of an ear, noise controls, audiometric testing, evaluation of audiograms, training, and record keeping.
Heath Foott, CSP, CSHM, MBAManager of Environmental Health and Safety, Bend Research, Bend
Cory Stengel, CSHMOccupational Health Consultant, Industrial Hygienist, Oregon OSHA, Bend
Dr. Eric WattenburgOwner/Doctor, Your Care, Redmond
Session Descriptions
8
Wednesday, September 20
7:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Registration open
7:30-8:15 a.m. Breakfast and Prizes with Exhibitors
8:15-8:45 a.m. Visit Exhibits
8:15-11 a.m. Exhibits open
8:45-10:15 a.m. SESSION 3
The Power Trio: People Skills for Improving Performance (8:45 a.m.-4:30 p.m.)
Personal CommunicationA message sent does not equal a message received! The cost of poor communication is tremendous: Misunderstandings lead to waste and rework, and ultimately, relationships break down. Our ability to have conscious interactions and intentional discussions is key to elevating the quality of relationships and improving performance.Responding to CriticismWhen managers and supervisors are not receptive to input, employees and coworkers quit coming to them with complaints, issues, ideas, and solutions. Yet the tendency to be reactive to feedback and get defensive is natural. At the same time, amazing things happen when we become more aware of our reactive triggers and respond to critical feedback with genuine curiosity. Uncomfortable situations become opportunities to gain clarity and information. Individuals feel valued for their contributions. This program helps you and your team learn powerful communication methods for sending and receiving messages. Individual contributions and team results soar when members of an organization practice these skills.Construction ConfrontationWhen managers and lead people do not provide corrective feedback, it breeds inconsistency and diminishes relationships. In fact, when performance issues go uncorrected, serious consequences occur. Productivity, safety, and quality are negatively impacted, and people lose their effectiveness as leaders and the issues spread. Yet many leaders do not know the most effective ways to address performance issues.This component helps you and your team learn to forge solutions from the heat of confrontation, allowing all parties to emerge with clear understanding and full integrity.
Constructive Confrontation helps your team:• Reframe conflict situations for quicker resolution• Understand the personal and organizational consequences of
failing to confront• Apply the constructive confrontation model to real-world
issues
Dan MillerPresident, Dan Miller & Associates, Bend
Compliance Elements of a Lockout Tagout Program
This presentation provides introductory explanations and guidelines for conducting and analyzing results from a Job Hazard Analysis (JHA). It also discusses how a JHA can help in taking this information further by helping to develop safety procedures for employee training. Attendees learn how to classify safety hazards, gain ideas for mitigating hazards in the workplace, and techniques for writing a JHA. In addition, participants learn how to use JHAs for enhancing safe work practices.
Heath Foott, CSP, CSHM, MBAManager of Environmental Health and Safety, Bend Research, Bend
Brett Phillips, LEED APPrinicipal Consultant/Manager, BSI EHS Services and Solutions, Hillsboro
Hiring Right
This session discusses determining if you need an employee, the steps of a legal hiring process, and onboarding of that employee. Time is reserved at the end of the session for questions and answers. Please bring your HR questions and concerns.
Nancy Gammond-MoodySenior Human Resources Manager, BBSI, Bend
Session Descriptions
Topics of interest for...
Safety Committees
Cannabis Industry
Fire/Emergency Services
Environmental Concerns
9
system...the What?!; NEW SDS…”Look Ma no ‘M’!”; the secondary container labeling rule; and have you seen the new pictograms?; just for starters. Attendees come away with an understanding of what a written program should include. This session is for the new and experienced chemical manager/user, safety committee members, owners, and managers who need to ensure they are in compliance with the OSHA rules and regulations to ensure the safety of their employees.
Eric FullanSafety Officer, City of Hillsboro, Hillsboro
10:15-11 a.m. Exhibits; Lucky Numbers activity (concludes)
11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. SESSION 4
The Power Trio: People Skills for Improving Performance (continued from 8:45 a.m.)
Electrical Safety for Non-Electricians
This program offers the non-electrical personnel safe practices to deal with electrical issues and the tools to find assistance when dealing with problems. Identification of issues that are the source of electrical shock and/or fires are included along with installations and utilization covered in Oregon’s general industry and agricultural safety codes.
Bruce PoinsettePartner/Safety Consultant, GEW-LLC, Lake Oswego
Recordable/Reportable or Both?
This class reviews reporting requirements for both DCBS Form 801 and the Oregon OSHA 300 log. Presenters talk about real-life scenarios to help participants determine how an injury or illness should be recorded. Recently adopted changes to the Oregon OSHA recording and reporting requirements are also covered.
Craig HamelundEducation Specialist, Oregon OSHA, Tigard
Bob HamreField Investigator, Workers’ Compensation Division, Salem
How Training Impacts Safety
Learn how training is the first line of defense in firefighter safety. Explore case studies, national data, and personal experiences to form a foundation of the state of firefighter deaths and injuries. You come away with areas of training to save lives and reduce injuries. The instructors lead participants in discussions to develop their understanding of key issues and provide action oriented take-aways.
Brian StewartBattalion Chief, Clackamas Fire District #1, Milwaukie
Ron WilliamsonRetired Fire District Safety Officer
Understanding the Regulations and Working in Partnership with Regulators for Compliance and Sustainability
The objective of the presentation is to educate industries on federal, state, and local regulations involving water and wastewater. This includes sampling, monitoring, inspections, green chemistry, and understanding enforcement procedures and working with your regulator. What can happen to publically owned treatment works and the environment without compliance? Some examples of the necessity of these regulations are provided. In addition, the presentation covers the concept of forming municipal/industrial partnerships to find ways to reduce, reuse, and recycle water/wastewater thereby managing community resources for sustainability and the overall concept of industries and regulators working together to solve problems, find solutions, and stay in compliance.
Christina Davenport, MSCIndustrial Pretreatment Technician, City of Bend, Bend
What Do You Mean the Hazard Communication Rule is about Chemicals?
Is your Chemical program up to date with the new GHS regulations? Join this session to find out what should be in your written program—did you know GHS is the globally harmonized
Wednesday, September 20, continued
Register online! safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
Session Descriptions
10
Wednesday, September 20, continued
Workplace Health and Safety in the Cannabis Industry
Topics covered include:• Life mission of clean living and embracing an organic, eco-
sustainable lifestyle• Lives out mission in organic and full-spectrum farming• Advocate for the small grower• First ever cannabis farmer to work with Federal Government• Future of the industry credibility• Advocate for the craft cannabis farmer• Give hope the federal government is moving in the right
direction normalizing cannabis• Inform audience we are moving the cannabis industry
forward in a credible way
Tom LauermanFounder/Farmer, Farmer Tom Organics, Vancouver, WA
Introduction to Air Permit Requirements in Oregon
We discuss:• Pollutants of concern, including criteria pollutants, hazardous
air pollutants, and air toxics.• The types of air permits and other mechanisms used by the
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality to identify and regulate sources of pollutants of concern.
Pamela PulliamEnvironmental Engineer, Bend Research, Bend
Respiratory Protection Programs
This session discusses and defines effective elements of a Respiratory Protection Program. Topics include regulatory program requirements, training, and use and fit testing of respirators to include SCBA. This session also includes a presentation by an occupational health professional who discusses the medical evaluation process for respirator use.
Liz Foott, ASPSenior Safety Management Consultant, SAIF Corporation, Bend
Dr. Eric WattenburgOwner/Doctor, Your Care, Redmond
12:30-1:30 p.m. Lunch (provided)
1:30-4:30 p.m. SESSION 5
The Power Trio: People Skills for Improving Performance (continued from 8:45 a.m.)
Safety-at-Heights: Fall Protection
This session includes fundamentals of safety-at-heights, fall hazard control methods, physics of a fall, anchor points, identifying and selection of equipment, building systems-work positioning, work restraint and personal fall arrest, donning and doffing a harness, calculating fall distance, suspension trauma and rescue requirements, and equipment inspections.
Jarrodd Bohn, CHST Safety Compliance Officer, Oregon OSHA, Bend
Greg McDonaldDistrict Sales & Training Manager, Ritz Safety, Donald
PPE: How Do You Know What You Need?
This session covers the selection of the appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE) based on the PPE hazard assessment that is required to be performed and documented by OSHA. The hazard identification and assessment process is expanded to include aspects of risk assessment. Employers, safety professionals, and safety committee members should be able to identify when a PPE hazard assessment is necessary and how to perform and document it properly upon completion of this session.
Bruce Hollcroft, CSP, ARM, CHMMSenior Risk Control SpecialistPayneWest Insurance
Session Descriptions
Topics of interest for...
Safety Committees
Cannabis Industry
Fire/Emergency Services
Environmental Concerns
11
Wednesday, September 20, continued
Safety Committee: Accident Investigation
Having a process in place for conducting accident investigations along with having safety committees’ members trained on these concepts is a requirement. So, since you have to investigate, why not get the most out of it? In this training we take you through an approach to accident investigation that gets rid of the investigation and turns it into an analysis. This session walks you through a 4-step process helping your company to identify system failures in your processes that lead to injury. Case studies help you see that too many times we fix the person and not the system.
Luke BettsSenior Safety Management Consultant, SAIF Corporation, The Dalles
Scott Brown, ARMSenior Safety Management Consultant, SAIF Corporation, Bend
Hazardous Waste Basics and Ins and Outs of the Hazardous Substance Information Survey
The Firefighter’s focus is to ensure the emergency service equipment is in a constant state of readiness. With this kind of focus, the safety and health issues in and around the station tend to be overlooked. The speaker provides the insight and tools to conduct a safety committee walkthrough of the station, identifying typical items he finds in fire stations. Anyone on a safety committee, or interested in participating on a safety committee, is encouraged to attend this session.
Brian Allen, CESCOSenior Hazardous Waste Compliance Inspector, Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, Bend
Amber PetersenEHS Specialist, Bend Research, Bend
Register online! safetyseries.cvent.com/central17
Cannabis – Seeing the Forest through the Trees
If you are a Producer, Processor, Retailer, Wholesaler, Researcher or Lab worker, or just fascinated with this “Growing” industry - this class helps you understand: the regulatory requirements and how they relate to pesticide use; licensing/permitting requirements; and worker safety and health obligations. Come join this panel of cannabis experts from Oregon Department of Agriculture (ODA), Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC), and Oregon OSHA (OR-OSHA) to learn and discuss the pressing issues of growing, harvesting, producing, and selling cannabis in Oregon.
Sunny JonesCannabis Policy Coordinator, Oregon Department of Agriculture, Salem
Mark PettingerSpokesperson, Recreational Marijuana Program, Oregon Liquor Control Commission, Portland
Gary RobertsonOccupational Safety Consultant, Oregon OSHA, Medford
Paul Utterback, MS, EdM, CIHSenior Occupational Health Consultant, Oregon OSHA, Medford
2:45-3 p.m Break
Session Descriptions
Thank you for the support from the Deschutes County Farm Bureau in creating the
worker safety and health topics on the agenda for the Cannabis industry.
SponsorsThe Conference Planning Committee extends special
thanks to the following organizations for their generous donations to this year’s conference:
AmeriTies West, LLC
Bend Research, Inc.
Deschutes Brewery
Deschutes County Farm Bureau
Oregon Fire Chiefs Safety and Health Section
Oregon SHARP Alliance
Portland General Electric (Pelton Round Butte)
SAIF Corporation
Suterra
Your Care(list as of 8/01/17)
Conference Planning Committee
Jarrodd Bohn – Oregon OSHA
Kelli Candella – Deschutes County Road Dept
Jillian Cornejo – BBSI
Travis Davis – PayneWest Insurance
Phil Drew – Saddle Mountain Safety Management
Niki Fisher – Bend Parks and Recreation
Heath Foott – Bend Research
Donna Holcomb – Your Care
Mike Jervis – Deschutes Brewery
Randy McCulley – Deschutes County Road Dept
Julia Means – SAIF Corporation
Katie Merickel – Selectemp
Randy Nice – Oregon OSHA
David Phillips – Black Butte Ranch RFP
Cory Stengel – Oregon OSHA
Judy West – Clean Water Services
Jasen Winters – Bend Surgery Center
Oregon OSHAOregon OSHA administers the Oregon Safe Employment Act (OSEA). The OSEA authorizes enforcement of federal and state occupational safety and health regulations and provides consultation, educational opportunities, technical assistance, and creative programs to assist employers and employees in Oregon. Oregon OSHA is committed to reducing occupational fatalities, injuries, and illnesses; thereby reducing human suffering and workers’ compensation costs. For technical assistance, training opportunities, or information about conferences, please call 503-378-3272, or toll-free 888-292-5247, option 1. For consultative services, call toll-free 800-922-2689 or call our Bend office, 541-388-6068.
Co-sponsorship of this conference by Central Oregon Safety & Health Association and Oregon OSHA does not necessarily constitute endorsement or approval of the content of programs. Employers and employees should review applicable rules and regulations to ensure that the information they have received is appropriate to their specific worksite and work situation. COSHA is financially responsible for conference arrangements and commitments.
Central Oregon Safety & Health AssociationThe Central Oregon Safety and Health Association is proud to co-sponsor this conference. This association was formed in early 1998 in response to a need for education and networking opportunities for safety and health professionals in the Deschutes County area. There are NO DUES to belong to the association — just interest and a commitment to the delivery of professional and ethical services to all businesses and individuals in Central Oregon. Participation and involvement are the keys to success for the Central Oregon Safety and Health Association. Become involved today! For more information, call Kelli Candella, 541-322-7104. In January, COSHA co-sponsors the Mid-Oregon Construction Safety Summit. Learn more at www.cosha.org.