“Vulnerable
workers” in the United States who are not proficient in English may be at risk of not
being properly trained for safe work at height.
At
the IPAF Summit in Miami, Jordan Barab, U.S .Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health, highlighted the need
to target vulnerable workers with limited English proficiency and commended
IPAF’s ongoing training and safety initiatives. IPAF CEO Tim Whiteman committed
to provide the AWPT operator training program in Spanish.
The
aerial work platform (AWP) operator course managed in the US and Canada by
IPAF’s North American subsidiary American Work Platform Training (AWPT) is now
available in Spanish, as part of IPAF’s continuing commitment to provide
training and safety material in other languages. IPAF has, thus, fulfilled the
commitment made to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
AWPT-approved
training centers that will be offering the operator course in Spanish include
Valcourt Exterior Building Services based in New Jersey. The AWPT eLearning
module will be available in Spanish by the end of September.
“IPAF
has met the commitment it made to provide materials in other languages,” says Tony
Groat, IPAF USA and AWPT executive VP. “We open up the challenge to
those in the industry. Get your employees trained in a manner they can
understand for safe AWP operations. The material and the tools are there, and
there is no excuse for untrained workers when working at height.”
No comments:
Post a Comment