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Workplace safety audits are a critical tool for identifying hazards, preventing accidents, and ensuring compliance with OSHA and DOT regulations. This course walks employees through every stage of the safety audit process — from workplace analysis and systems of controls to personal safety assessments and emergency response procedures — so they can actively contribute to a safer work environment, whether on the warehouse floor or behind the wheel of a commercial motor vehicle.

Course Highlights
  • What a safety audit is, why it matters, and the three major types of safety audits
  • How a workplace analysis is conducted, including physical inspections of facilities, equipment, and vehicles
  • DOT and FMCSA motor carrier safety audit requirements, including the six categories auditors review
  • Key documentation drivers must maintain, such as HOS logs, drug and alcohol test records, and vehicle inspection reports
  • OSHA’s hierarchy of controls — from hazard elimination and substitution to engineering controls, administrative controls, and PPE
  • How to conduct a self-inspection of your work area, workstation, or vehicle cab
  • Performing a personal safety audit to evaluate your own awareness of procedures, emergency resources, and facility layouts
  • Emergency response procedures for both warehouse incidents and on-road accidents
  • The importance of reporting all incidents and near-misses, no matter how minor
By the end of the course, you will have learned
  • The purpose of safety audits and how they help protect workers, improve safety programs, and maintain regulatory compliance
  • How to participate in a workplace analysis by inspecting your own area, identifying hazards, and communicating findings to the audit team
  • What FMCSA auditors review during DOT motor carrier safety audits and how to keep required documentation current and accessible
  • How each level of OSHA’s hierarchy of controls functions and why all controls must be used in combination to be effective
  • How to identify and report unsafe conditions in your work area, including cluttered pathways, damaged equipment, and ergonomic risks
  • How to conduct a personal audit by reviewing SOPs, locating emergency resources, and evaluating your own safety habits
  • The correct steps to take when an accident or emergency occurs in a warehouse or on the road, including when and how to file incident reports
  • Why near-misses must be reported and how doing so helps prevent future accidents

Course Content