ARTICLE
13 May 2024

Reminder To Prepare For Heat Stress

JW
Jones Walker

Contributor

At Jones Walker, we look beyond today’s challenges and focus on the opportunities of the future. Since our founding in May 1937 by Joseph Merrick Jones, Sr., and Tulane Law School graduates William B. Dreux and A.J. Waechter, we have consistently asked ourselves a simple question: What can we do to help our clients succeed, today and tomorrow?
OSHA is renewing its efforts to direct "significant existing outreach and enforcement resources" to address heat stress in the workplace.
United States Employment and HR

OSHA is renewing its efforts to direct "significant existing outreach and enforcement resources" to address heat stress in the workplace. This is a reminder to employers to ensure you have a heat stress policy in place and that your employees are trained on the hazards associated with heat.

By law, employers must protect workers from the dangers of heat exposure and should have a proper safety and health plan in place. At a minimum, employers should provide adequate cool water, rest breaks and shade or a cool rest area. Employees who are new or returning to a high heat workplace should be allowed time to gradually get used to working in hot temperatures. Workers and managers should also be trained so they can identify and help prevent heat illness themselves.

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