OSHA 30 General Industry acts as a solid introduction to common occupational safety concepts and workplace hazards. It is ideal and often required for many frontline and supervisory workers who need to show proof of completion of a training course by an authorized OSHA outreach.
The 30-hour course is more appropriate for supervisors and workers with some safety responsibility while the 10-hour course is intended for the general workforce. Your employer should tell you if one course or the other is preferred or required.
This OSHA Outreach course is provided in partnership with HSI (Summit Training Source), an OSHA-authorized online Outreach provider. 4-6 weeks after completion of all course requirements the learner will receive a plastic wallet DOL/OSHA 30-Hour completion card by mail.
Intended Audience: While this program is ideal for most work environments, workers in construction should take the OSHA 30-hour Construction program.
Product Codes:
- English: 23147
- Spanish: 68013
OSHA Outreach courses are provided in partnership with HSI (Summit Training Source), an OSHA-authorized online Outreach provider.
- Introduction to OSHA
- Employee Safety Orientation
- Back Safety and Injury Prevention
- Workplace Hazard Recognition
- Incident Investigation
- Slips, Trips, and Falls
- Scaffold Safety
- Emergency and Fire Preparedness
- Fire Extinguisher Safety
- Fire Extinguishers: Monthly Inspections
- Active Shooter Response
- Earthquake Preparedness
- Hurricane Preparedness
- Tornado Preparedness
- Electrical Safety: General Awareness
- Electrical Safety: Hazards, Controls, and Best Practices
- Lockout Tagout
- Arc Flash and Electrical Safety Best Practices
- Personal Protective Equipment Fundamentals
- PPE - Head Protection
- PPE - Eye and Face Protection
- PPE - Hearing Protection
- PPE - Hand Protection
- PPE - Foot Protection
- PPE - Respiratory Protection
- Hazardous Material Transportation: Handling Non-Bulk Packages
- Powered Industrial Truck Safety
- Intro to Loading Dock Safety
- Intro to Pallet Jack Safety
- Intro to Safe Material Storage
- Conveyor Safety
- Overhead and Gantry Crane Safety
- Hazard Communication
- Workplace Signs, Labels, and Tags
- Chemical Safety
- Compressed Gas Safety
- Flammable Liquid
- Intro to Spray Finishing Hazards
- Intro to Hexavalent Chromium
- Intro to Benzene Hazards
- Intro to Beryllium Hazards
- Chlorine Safety
- Formaldehyde Safety
- Hydrogen Sulfide Safety
- Intro to Combustible Dust Hazards
- Preventing Spills
- Confined Space Entry - Permit Required
- Cold Stress
- Heat Stress
- Hand and Power Tool Safety
- Machine Guarding
- Hand Safety
- Industrial Ergonomics
- Office Ergonomics
- Intro to Personal Safety
- Behavior Based Safety
- Process Safety Management
- Forklift - Fundamentals
- Forklift - Safe Driving
- Forklift - Load Handling
- Forklift Stability and Capacity
- Forklift Inspection and Maintenance
- Mobile and Elevating Work Platforms: Aerial and Scissor Lift Safety
- Winter Weather Driving
- Passenger Van Driver Safety
- Respiratory Protection
- Eye Safety
- Hearing Conservation
- Indoor Air Quality
- Intro to Mold and Mildew Awareness
- Laser Safety
- Intro to Cadmium Hazards
- Liquid Nitrogen Safety
- X-Ray Safety
- Hot Work
- Bloodborne Pathogens
- Personal Fall Arrest Systems
- Stairway Hazards
- Ladder Safety
- Mobile Ladder Safety
- Cold Flu and Transmissible Illness
- Fatigue and Stress Awareness
- Mosquito, Tick, and Vector-Borne Illness
- OSHA Work-Related Injury and Illness Recordkeeping
- Violence in the Workplace
- Workspace Cleanliness
To comply with OSHA’s requirements for offering this program, there are some special considerations:
- Learner will need to register a valid mailing address to receive their completion card
- Learner can spend no more than 7.5 hours training in any 10-hour period
- Learner can spend no more than 10 hours training in any 16-hour period
- Learner must train on at least four calendar days to complete.