Monday, January 15, 2007


BADLANDSAFETY.COM

DICKINSON, NORTH DAKOTA

(701) 203-1397

 
 

CORSES

 JSA & GHS
OSHA 10& 30
FIRST AID CPR AED 


Length: 8-10 Hours

The PEC Basic Orientation safety awareness course includes both SafeGulf and SafeLandUSA. PEC Basic was designed to take the place of multiple Operator orientations and to give each student a general idea of life and safety issues in the oil and gas industry, upstream, downstream, onshore or offshore. This one-day program meets API RP 75 & API RP T-1 requirements and provides a basic understanding at an awareness level of certain general safety information that an employee should know before entering a company facility and while performing their assigned work duties. Over 25 of the leading oil and gas operators accept this orientation as it meets their requirements. Upon successful completion of course, each student is issued a picture ID with a unique barcode. The student information is then stored in an online database. This orientation has become the standard program for the industry and certifies a student at awareness level for the following:

§ SafeGulf Certification

§ SafeLand Certification

§ Confined Space

§ Rigging

§ Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S)

§ Lockout/Tag-out

§ Fall Protection

§ Hazmat (HM 126)

§ Hazardous communications

§ Personal Protective Equipment

§ Hearing Conservation

§ Emergency Response

§ Process Safety Management

§ Welding Safety

§ Defensive Driving

§ Hazwoper (Oper.)

§ Fire Protection

§ Medical Records

§ Forklift Safety

§ Respiratory Protection

§ Electrical Safety

§ Terrorism Response Awareness Program (TRAP)

§ Back Safety

§ Alcohol and substance abuse awareness

§ Offshore Transportation (Departure, Helicopter, Boat, Arrival, etc.)

§ Offshore Safety (Swing Ropes / Personnel Baskets, Water Safety, etc.)

Course Objectives

§ To prepare the student to know what types of additional training they will need in order to work for the various operators at both onshore and offshore facilities.

§ To create a mind set in each student that will help them to play an active role in the safety program at their work facility.

§ To explain to each student the value of asking questions when they do not understand a certain aspect of their job.

§ To ensure that each employee that has completed this program has an identification card indicating that they have completed the course.

Target Audience

An essential course for any employee that is new to the O&G and Petrochem industry that will consistently be working in plant, dockside, onshore or offshore facilities. This is required for any employee of a company that does exploration, production, drilling and/or refining work for any of the leading operators.

Prerequisites

There are no prerequisites for this course.

 


Globally Harmonized System and Job Safety Analysis
Globally Harmonized System (GHS)

Requirement:

OSHA requires that all workers potentially exposed to hazardous chemicals be trained in an update to the hazardous communications regulations known as the Globally Harmonized System (GHS) by December 1, 2013.

The PEC GHS Course:

The course will cover the elements that address the OSHA training requirements for GHS. Recognizing that many workers did not have adequate training in hazard communication or at least have not had recent training, the course will also provide basic/refresher training in the requirements of the HazCom regulations. The course length is approximately two hours. Topics covered will include:

§ Employer requirements under GHS

§ Why GHS is important to workers

§ Use of pictograms in classifying hazards

§ Elements of GHS-compliant labels

§ Elements of GHS-Compliant safety data sheets

Background:

OSHA estimates that 40 million American workers may potentially be exposed to hazardous chemicals in their workplace. These workers fall under the “Right to Know” requirements contained in the hazardous communications regulations and must be trained in HazCom. Countries around the world, including the United States, have agreed to a common, standardized labeling and hazard classification system. In March, OSHA released the U.S. version of GHS and set the following deadlines for implementation:

By December 1, 2013
Train employees on new chemical labeling elements and Safety Data Sheet format.
By June 1, 2015
Comply with all GHS provisions for preparation of new hazardous chemical labels and safety data sheets.
By December 1, 2015
Use new GHS labeling elements for all hazardous chemicals being shipped.
By June 1, 2016
Update in-plant chemical labeling systems, HazCom program. Provide additional employee training for newly-identified hazards.

 

Job Safety Analysis

Requirement:

It is common for contractor personnel to be required to perform Job Safety Analysis (JSA) at worksites, but operators are increasingly concerned at the quality of those JSAs. Some operators now require that contractors put their personnel through JSA training. It is expected that the new revisions to the Safety and Environmental Management Systems (SEMS) regulations will make JSA training mandatory for all offshore personnel. The PEC JSA Course: The course is based on a combination of classroom training and exercises aimed at teaching the personnel how to work as a team in creating JSAs and watching out for each other’s safety. The class length is approximately two hours. It will cover basics of JSA:

§ The JSA triangle

§ JSA goals

§ Recognizing changing jobsite hazards

§ Common hazards

§ Commonsense JSA tips

§ Recognizing the JSA danger zone


The program is adaptable so that classes from different types of operations can learn the fundamentals of JSAs and classes from the same company or type of operation can focus on their company’s scope of work and JSA forms. Students will receive a JSA tip card that they can use in the field as they create JSAs. Background: The concept of JSAs is relatively easy to explain. The problem is that workers do not appear to see the value of JSAs in keeping them safe. In preparing this course, PEC conducted extensive research, interviewed operators and contractors, consulted safety studies and reviewed existing JSA training. Based on this research, PEC has developed a course that engages crews, gives them simple concepts they can easily understand and gives them tools they take back to the job.

 

OSHA 10 & 30 HOUR CERTIFICATES

Our online OSHA 10-hour general industry training teaches safety awareness and helps each worker recognize and reduce the risks of jobsite hazards. This OSHA hazard recognition course covers general industry hazards not specific to those working construction-only jobs and is intended as an orientation to OSHA standards. Workers taking general industry OSHA courses usually have jobs related to health care, factory, warehouse, manufacturing, storage and more.

OSHA recommends workplace safety training for a safe and healthful work environment. Our training is 100% online and covers specific OSHA regulations and requirements as they apply to the general industry.

o    Earn Continuing Education Credits (CEUs)

o    Earn Official Certificate and Course Completion Wallet Card

o    Get Email Access to a Course Trainer

o    100% Money-Back, Satisfaction Guarantee

Course Details:

o    Includes Audio Narration and Interactive Exercises

o    Study Real Life Case Studies

o    Download or Print Reviews to Prepare for Final Exam

o    Work Anytime, Anywhere with Access to Internet

o    Complete At Your Own Pace

Course Topics:

o    Introduction to OSHA

o    Electrical

o    Exit Routes, Emergency Action Plans & Fire Prevention

o    Walking and Working Surfaces

o    Flammable and Combustible Liquids

o    Personal Protective Equipment

o    Machine Guarding

o    Hazard Communication

o    Introduction to Bloodborne Pathogens

o    Safety and Health Programs

*Upon successful completion of online courses students will receive ISEI wallet card and completion certificate.