OSHA 10/30 (General Industry & Construction)
OSHA 10-Hour | General Industry Course Number: OSHA-10G
Highlights
- Comprehensive introduction to OSHA regulations and worker protections
- Hazard recognition across common general industry risk areas
- Practical safe work practices and incident prevention methods
- Fall protection overview and emergency lowering awareness
- Guidance on hazard reporting and employee involvement in safety programs
- Ideal for entry-level industrial and general industry personnel
OSHA 30-Hour | General Industry Course Number: OSHA-30G
Highlights
- Supervisor-focused hazard analysis and control methods
- Expanded safety program development and management elements
- Control familiarity across multiple lift types
- In-depth OSHA standards application and compliance strategies
- Real-world enforcement and incident case examples
- Ideal for supervisors, managers, safety coordinators, and leadership staff
OSHA 10-Hour | Construction Course Number: OSHA-10C
Highlights
- In-depth coverage of Focus Four construction hazards
- Jobsite hazard recognition and safe decision-making practices
- Ladder, scaffold, PPE, and electrical safety fundamentals
- Multi-employer worksite awareness and worker rights
- Ideal for entry-level construction personnel
OSHA 30-Hour | Construction
Course Number: OSHA-30C
The OSHA 30-Hour Construction course delivers comprehensive, supervisor-level safety training for construction foremen, supervisors, project managers, and safety representatives. This program expands significantly beyond entry-level topics to include regulatory interpretation, hazard control systems, safety planning, and leadership responsibilities for construction site safety and compliance.
Instruction includes detailed Focus Four hazard controls along with expanded coverage of scaffolding systems, excavation and trenching safety, crane and rigging hazards, heavy equipment operations, fall protection program management, and competent person responsibilities. Additional subjects include safety and health program development, job hazard analysis (JHA), incident investigation, documentation practices, contractor coordination, and OSHA inspection readiness. Emphasis is placed on proactive planning, hazard prevention, and supervisory accountability.
Highlights
- Supervisor-level construction safety and compliance training
- Expanded Focus Four hazard control strategies
- Scaffolding, excavation, crane, and high-risk activity oversight
- Safety planning, documentation, and hazard control systems
- Strong support for regulatory compliance and leadership readiness