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Episode 22- OSHA Voluntary Protection Program (VPP) - part 2

Episode 22 Published 3 years, 4 months ago
Description

Episode 22 continues the deep dive into the Hazard Prevention and Control element of OSHA’s Voluntary Protection Program (VPP). In Part 2, Dr. Ayers expands on what VPP evaluators look for and how organizations can demonstrate that their hazard‑control systems are effective, sustainable, and employee‑driven.

The core message: VPP-level hazard control isn’t about having controls — it’s about proving they work, are maintained, and are continuously improved.

  🧱 What Part 2 Emphasizes About Hazard Prevention & Control

Part 2 focuses on the quality and reliability of hazard controls, not just their existence. VPP sites must show:

  • Controls are implemented correctly

  • Controls are maintained over time

  • Employees are involved in identifying and improving controls

  • Systems prevent hazards from recurring

  • Leadership supports and verifies control effectiveness

This is where VPP separates “paper programs” from real safety systems.

  🧰 Key Areas Highlighted in Part 2   🟦 1. Verification That Controls Actually Work

VPP evaluators expect evidence that hazard controls:

  • Reduce exposure

  • Prevent incidents

  • Are used consistently

  • Are reviewed and updated

It’s not enough to install a guard — you must show it prevents injury and stays in place.

  🟩 2. Sustaining Controls Over Time

Controls must be:

  • Inspected

  • Maintained

  • Repaired promptly

  • Replaced when worn or outdated

This ties closely to preventive maintenance and management accountability.

  🟧 3. Employee Involvement in Hazard Control

Employees should:

  • Suggest improvements

  • Help design engineering controls

  • Participate in testing and feedback

  • Report when controls fail or drift

VPP requires employee ownership, not just compliance.

  🟥 4. Documentation That Tells the Story

VPP evaluators want to see:

  • Hazard tracking logs

  • Closure documentation

  • PM records

  • Training records

  • Evidence of follow‑up

Documentation proves the system is functioning, not theoretical.

  🟫 5. Emergency Preparedness and Response (Expanded)

Part 2 reinforces that emergency systems must be:

  • Practiced

  • Evaluated

  • Improved after drills

  • Understood by all employees

VPP sites demonstrate readiness, not just written plans.

  ⚠️ Common Weaknesses Identified in Part 2

Dr. Ayers highlights several issues that prevent VPP approval:

  • Controls installed but not maintained

  • PPE relied on instead of engineering controls

  • Hazards corrected slowly or inconsistently

  • Lack of employee involvement in control selection

  • Emergency drills that are unrealistic or infrequent

  • Poor documentation of hazard closure

These weaknesses show that the system is reactive, not proactive.

  🧭 What VPP Evaluators Want to See
  • A living hazard‑control system

  • Evidence of continuous improvement

  • Strong preventive maintenance

  • Employee participation at every stage

  • Controls that reduce risk at the source

  • Leadership accountability for sustaining controls

VPP is about demonstrating excellence, not minimum compliance.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways
  • Hazard controls must be effective, maintained, and continuously improved

  • Employee involvement strengthens control reliabil

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