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🦺 Safety Orientation Playbook

Onboard new workers with thorough safety orientation before they pick up a tool. OSHA requires training on hazards before exposure — orientation is your first line of defense and your compliance foundation.


Why This Matters

Without Proper OrientationWith Proper Orientation
Workers exposed to hazards they don't recognizeWorkers know site-specific hazards before starting
OSHA citations for training gapsDocumented proof of training (who, what, when)
Third-party injuries from untrained subsSubs understand site rules and emergency procedures
Confusion about reporting and PPEClear expectations from day one
Liability exposure in incident investigations"We trained them" — documented defense
OSHA Requirement

OSHA 1926.21(b)(2) requires that employees be instructed to recognize and avoid unsafe conditions and the regulations applicable to their work environment to control or eliminate hazards. Training must occur before exposure to hazards.


Roles and Responsibilities

RoleResponsibilities
Safety DirectorDevelop orientation content, maintain templates, train orienters, audit compliance
Superintendent / PMEnsure no worker starts without orientation, coordinate multi-employer orientations
Foreman / OrienterDeliver general + site-specific orientation, collect signatures, submit documentation
HR / AdminSchedule orientation before first day, track completion, file records
Subcontractor SuperintendentEnsure sub workers attend GC orientation or equivalent, provide trade-specific training

Step-by-Step Workflow

Phase 1: Pre-Arrival prep

Before the worker shows up:

  1. Schedule orientation — Block time on first day; orientation before any work
  2. Prepare materials — Site-specific hazards list, emergency procedures, PPE requirements
  3. Assign orienter — Competent person who knows the site and company program
  4. Check language needs — Arrange translator or translated materials if needed
  5. Gather documentation — Orientation checklist, signature forms, training records

Phase 2: General Company Orientation

Company-wide content (30–45 minutes):

TopicWhat to Cover
Company safety policyManagement commitment, right to refuse unsafe work, non-retaliation
Emergency proceduresFirst aid location, AED, fire extinguishers, evacuation routes, assembly point
PPE requirementsHard hat, safety glasses, hearing protection, gloves, boots — when and where
Reporting processHow to report injuries, near-misses, hazards — who to tell, no blame
Incident responseWhat to do if someone is hurt — call 911, render aid, secure scene
Safety meetingsToolbox talks, JHAs, pre-task planning — what to expect

Phase 3: Site-Specific Orientation

This project only — different from general orientation:

TopicWhat to Cover
Site layoutEntry/exit, parking, staging areas, restricted zones
Active hazardsExcavations, overhead work, traffic, confined spaces, live electrical
Site rulesSmoking areas, PPE zones, speed limits, pedestrian paths
Emergency on this siteNearest first aid, AED location, assembly point, who to call
EvacuationRoutes, muster points, headcount procedure
GC-specific requirementsAny rules beyond company standard (e.g., double hard hats in certain areas)
Site-Specific Checklist

Create a checklist for each project. A worker oriented at Site A is not oriented at Site B. Site-specific orientation must be repeated when they transfer to a new project.

Phase 4: Trade-Specific Training

Beyond orientation — task-specific training:

  • Fall protection — If working at heights
  • LOTO — If working on energized equipment
  • Scaffolding — If building or using scaffolds
  • Trenching — If working in excavations
  • Hot work — If welding/cutting
  • Confined space — If entering permit spaces

Trade-specific training may be delivered by a competent person or qualified trainer — document completion separately.

Phase 5: Verification

Before the worker starts work:

  1. Walk the site — Show first aid, fire extinguishers, emergency exits
  2. Q&A — "What do you do if you see a hazard?" — confirm understanding
  3. PPE fit check — Verify they have required PPE and it fits
  4. Sign-off — Worker signs that they received and understood orientation

Phase 6: Documentation

Required records:

DocumentRetain For
Orientation checklist (what was covered)Duration of employment + 5 years
Signature (worker name, date, orienter)Duration of employment + 5 years
Site-specific addendum (if separate)Project duration + 5 years
Trade-specific training recordsDuration of employment + 5 years

Multi-Employer Worksite Considerations

ScenarioWho OrientsWhat's Required
GC hires subGC provides site-specific orientation; Sub provides company + tradeBoth document; GC may require sub to attend GC orientation
Sub adds worker mid-projectSub orienterSame content as day-one workers
Worker transfers between subsReceiving subCompany + site-specific orientation
Temporary/agency workersHost employer (you)Same orientation as direct hires — they're on your site
Coordination

On multi-employer sites, the controlling contractor (usually GC) should coordinate orientations. Require subs to provide orientation certificates or attend a GC-led orientation before their workers start.


Language and Literacy Considerations

ConsiderationAction
Non-English speakersProvide translated materials; use bilingual orienter or translator
Low literacyUse visuals, demonstrations, walk-throughs; verbal confirmation
Multiple languagesOffer orientation in primary language; document language used
VerificationAsk worker to explain back — "What do you do if there's a fire?"

App Integration Tips

BLDR Pro — Documentation

Use BLDR Pro to store orientation checklists, signed forms, and photos. Attach orientation completion to worker records. When OSHA asks "did you train this worker?" — pull the timestamped document instantly.

Safety Meetings App — Training & Attendance

Track orientation attendance digitally. Safety Meetings app supports training sessions, sign-in, and completion tracking. Integrate with your worker database so you can see who's oriented vs. who's not before they hit the site.


Metrics to Track

MetricTargetFrequency
% of workers oriented before starting work100%Daily audit
Orientation completion rate100% of new hires within first shiftWeekly
Time to orient (from hire to completion)Same dayPer hire
Site-specific orientation when transferring100%Per transfer
Documentation completeness100% with signaturesMonthly audit

Common Mistakes

MistakeProblemFix
One-size-fits-all orientationSite B hazards different from Site ACreate site-specific checklist per project
Orientation after work startsWorker exposed before trainingBlock orientation before any work — no exceptions
Skipping subsUntrained sub workers create hazardsRequire sub orientation; verify before they start
No signaturesCan't prove training occurredSignature every time; retain records
Generic emergency procedures"Call 911" — but where's first aid?Site-specific: locations, routes, contacts
Ignoring language barriersWorker nods but doesn't understandUse translator; verify understanding

Troubleshooting

"We don't have time to orient — we need them working"

  • An untrained worker causes incidents that cost far more than 45 minutes. Schedule orientation as part of onboarding — non-negotiable.
  • Subs who show up without orientation: stop them at the gate until orientation is complete.

"Worker transferred from another project — do we re-orient?"

  • General company orientation: No — if they've had it recently (e.g., within 12 months).
  • Site-specific orientation: Yes — every new site. Hazards are different.

"Sub says they already oriented their worker"

  • Require documentation (signed checklist, date). If they can't produce it, they repeat orientation.
  • GC may require subs to attend GC-led site orientation regardless — it's your site, your rules.

"Worker doesn't speak English"

  • Use translated materials and a bilingual orienter or translator. Document the language used.
  • Walk-through and demonstration compensate when written materials aren't sufficient.

ResourceLink
Toolbox Talk PlaybookDaily Toolbox Talk
JSA/JHA PlaybookJSA/JHA Process
Incident Reporting PlaybookIncident Reporting
Safety Compliance GuideCompliance Guide
Safety Meetings Appsafetymeetings.app