ISHN
  Home
  Subscribe
  Subscribe to e-News
  Subscription Customer Service
  Online
  This Just In
  Calendar
  Digital Editions
  Showrooms
  Webinars
  Current Issue
  Cover Story
  Features
  Columns
  Web Exclusives
  Vendor News
  Product Spotlight
  Buyers Guides
  Resources
  ASSE Bookstore
  The "Checker" Bookstore
  Classifieds
  Career Search
  Archives
  Industrial Safety Video Archive
  e-News Archives
  Sites to See
  White Papers
  Market Research
  Special Collections
  Pandemic Preparedness
  Construction Safety 2009
  For Distributors Only
  Behavioral Safety
  OSHA Resources
  E-Learning
  Convention Companion
  ISHN Info
  Media Kit
  Contact Us
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
Work on voluntary health & safety standard continues

April 20, 2001

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



The recently formed ANSI committee charged with drawing up voluntary requirements for how to organize and audit workplace health and safety practices, similar to ISO quality and environmental “management systems” standards, will hold its second meeting May 17 and 18 in Alexandria, Va.

The ANSI Z10 committee is made up of a diverse array of industry, labor, government, academic and association representatives — 46 in all. Participants include OSHA and NIOSH; associations such as the American Industrial Hygiene Association and the American Society of Safety Engineers; the AFL-CIO and the United Auto Workers; the U.S. Chamber of Commerce; and corporations like General Motors, Goodyear, and John Deere.

Not all members are gung-ho about the need for an ISO-like safety and health standard, even if it’s voluntary. At the committee’s first meeting, about a half-dozen members voted against proceeding with standards-setting, according to sources.

“There’s just no need for it,” said one committee member. Large companies already have health and safety management practices in place, and small companies won’t be motivated by voluntary requirements, opponents of the ANSI standard argue. They see consultants who would verify compliance as the primary potential benefactors.

Still, with OSHA standards-setting mired in Washington’s anti-regulatory mood, this ANSI voluntary initiative is the only game in town, as one participant said. And if the effort gains momentum over the next year, no one wants to be left out of the action. A draft standard is targeted for the end of 2002.

For more information on the May meeting, contact AIHA’s Standards Coordinator David Gillum at (703) 849-8888.



|PrintEmail

Did you enjoy this article? Click here to subscribe to the magazine.
































BNP Media
© 2010 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy