[SML] OSHA 10/30 Safety & Health for the Entertainment Industry

Risk Intl. - Dr. Randall W.A. Davidson rdavidson at riskit.com
Tue Dec 19 08:57:57 UTC 2017


My partner, Jay Stone, has offered, via Risk International and his  IATSE local OSHA accredited workshops for years, all over the country for the Entertainment Industry. He lives in Salem, New Hampshire. Top of the line in workshops, OSHA for anyone in the Entertainment and Theatre Industry. Dr. Doom 

 


http://www.globalhealthandsafety.net/logo_email_signature.jpg

Dr. Randall W.A. Davidson, Product Liability and Risk Management Assessor at Risk International - www.riskit.com <http://www.riskit.com/> . Focused & Integrated Solutions to Global Problems - www.globalhealthandsafety.net <http://www.globalhealthandsafety.net/> . ISETSA - International Secondary Education Theater Health & Safety Association - www.isetsa.org <http://www.isetsa.org/> .


 

	

 

 

From: Stagecraft [mailto:stagecraft-bounces at theatrical.net] On Behalf Of Kristi R-C via Stagecraft
Sent: Monday, December 18, 2017 11:50 AM
To: stagecraft at theatrical.net
Cc: Kristi R-C; mptecdir at gmail.com
Subject: Re: [SML] OSHA 10/30 Safety & Health for the Entertainment Industry

 

The IATSE Training Trust started offering an OSHA 10, free to anyone working under a CBA that contributes to the trust, in various locations around the country a couple of years ago. The 30 can be obtained online for about $125. I'm more concerned that you actually have to put in the 30 hours rather than just pass the test - should be about the knowledge not how long you're sitting on the computer. 

 

IIRC, this was adapted from similar language that's in place in a city - perhaps Chicago?? Nevada is the first state to do it. It's akin to having a cosmetology license for a touring hairdresser, or teaching license for the tutor, or forklift/AWP/scissor certs. I'd love to see ESTA be accepted also - there are already employers requiring it and IA is encouraging anyone who qualifies to take the exam. 

 

It goes to changing the culture of "just get it done" to "we're doing to do this safely." And it does apply to anyone working in the state. The 14 days are cumulative, do not need to be contiguous, and heaven only knows how they are tracking that. 

 

Kristi R-C



---- Original Message ----
From: Ford Sellers via Stagecraft <stagecraft at theatrical.net>
To: Stagecraft Mailing List <stagecraft at theatrical.net>
Cc: Ford Sellers <fsellers at chauvetlighting.com>; Michael Powers <mptecdir at gmail.com>
Sent: Mon, Dec 18, 2017 8:32 am
Subject: Re: [SML] OSHA 10/30 Safety & Health for the Entertainment Industry

What Joe said,
There is a great conversation about this (started by Herrick) on FB. June Abernathy and Kristi Ross-Clausen have been the main contributors to the different sides of the "argument", with more input from others on Kristi's perspective. It is a very good read, and some of the points are extremely well thought out. Please head over there to fully understand both "sides".

My takeaways (my perspective only):

Basically, June's perspective is that anyone who does a touring show that lasts over 14 days, and will be directing local crew (basically the entire crew that travels with any show) is now being forced to get a 30 hour cert that has almost nothing to do our industry directly. This appears to have happened at the behest of IA Local 720, who wanted to make it more difficult for unskilled staffing agencies to fill stagehand positions (as noted by others in the conversation). June's point is that this is onerous, and doesn't really have a demonstrable positive effect on safety in our industry. Yes, generic safety improvements, but this is now enshrined in law, and based on a hunch.

Kristi and others have replied that it really isn't that onerous.
They haven't really directly addressed June's other points, but have raised various other interesting related topics.

It is a fascinating conversation... 


-----Original Message-----
From: Stagecraft [mailto:stagecraft-bounces at theatrical.net <mailto:stagecraft-bounces at theatrical.net?> ] On Behalf Of Michael Powers via Stagecraft
Sent: Friday, December 15, 2017 6:07 PM
To: Stagecraft <stagecraft at theatrical.net>
Cc: Michael Powers <mptecdir at gmail.com>
Subject: [SML] OSHA 10/30 Safety & Health for the Entertainment Industry

Ford Sellers,

What do you know about this??
Does it apply to every worker in Nevada or just residents?
Does it apply to all existing workers or only new hires starting 01/01/18??

Sounds at first like a laudable goal but that could add up to a massive cost in time and dollars for the Vegas Stri venues and any movie companies located in Nevada.

Any thoughts or words of wisdom?

-- 

Michael Powers
USMC '65-'69
ETCP Certified Rigger #820 Theatre (Ret'd)

____________________________________________________________
For list information see <http://stagecraft.theprices.net/>
Stagecraft mailing list
Stagecraft at theatrical.net
http://theatrical.net/mailman/listinfo/stagecraft_theatrical.net


____________________________________________________________
For list information see <http://stagecraft.theprices.net/>
Stagecraft mailing list
Stagecraft at theatrical.net
http://theatrical.net/mailman/listinfo/stagecraft_theatrical.net

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://theatrical.net/pipermail/stagecraft_theatrical.net/attachments/20171219/c95a8b94/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.jpg
Type: image/jpeg
Size: 18908 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://theatrical.net/pipermail/stagecraft_theatrical.net/attachments/20171219/c95a8b94/attachment.jpg>


More information about the Stagecraft mailing list