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The Internet is a great source of information about occupational
safety and health, which can be found in many websites belonging
to safety and health organizations, unions, government agencies
and universities.
But the information can be difficult
to find, because the internet can be a confusing and intimidating
place. This page is intended as a guide that will help the
beginner get started, and also help experienced surfers find
what they are looking for with speed and ease.
A place to start
The website you are viewing now is a good place to begin
a search for safety and health information. Our site
map will lead you to pages of valuable information in
this site, and our home page is
an excellent gateway to safety and health information on the
entire internet. (If you are an internet novice, please note:
if you follow any of the links in this page to another page,
you can return here by clicking on your browser's "back"
button.)
This website includes a collection
of factsheets on workplace hazards and extensive information
on the safety and health rights of workers. There are pages
of safety and health news, information about the OSHA ergonomics
standard and about the national campaign for safe needles
and a list (with e-mail links) of more
than 30 local committees for occupational safety and health
and similar organizations in the U.S. and Canada.
We have more than 70 pages of carefully chosen links to other
websites concerning specific occupational and environmental
safety and health topics, arranged by topic. All of those
pages are listed in the site map.
Some of the sites listed in our Resources and Links page are
highly specialized, such as the Carbonless
Copy Paper Injury and Information Network. Others sites,
such as OSHWEB
are extremely diverse. Such multi-issue sites are listed in
our list of links under the category "Occupational
Safety and Health, Industrial Hygiene."
All about PDF (Portable Document Format) files
When you are looking for information
in this site and elsewhere on the internet, you will often
encounter the PDF icon -- -- or a note that a file
is "in PDF format." You need a copy of the "Adobe
Acrobat Reader" program in your computer to open a PDF
file. If you don't have the software, you will need to download
it, free, from the Adobe website. It is a very useful program,
essential to anyone who makes regular use of the internet.
It is highly recommended
that when you access a PDF file, you "RIGHT Click"
on the link (instead of the normal LEFT Click) and save the
file directly to a folder and filename on your hard drive.
If you LEFT Click on the link, the PDF file will open immediately
on-screen, which will frequently result in technical difficulties
and the need for multiple download attempts. If you save the
file to your hard drive, you can open it at any time later,
on-line or off.
For answers to frequently
asked questions about Adobe Acrobat Reader, click
here, or to download Adobe Acrobat Reader, click
here.
Specialized websites
Some internet sites specialize
in providing information about specific hazards. For example,
the New Jersey Department of Health Hazardous
Substance Fact Sheet Collection includes more than 1,600
clear, concise fact sheets about toxics, listed alphabetically.
Another source of information about a long list of toxics
is the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
(NIOSH) collection of International
Chemical Safety Cards. We list these and similar sites
under the heading "Chemical
hazards, toxic substances, and Pesticides."
OSHA's website
Another excellent source of
information about specific hazards is the OSHA
website, which includes a subject
index that lists, in addition to chemical hazards, a wide
variety of physical and other hazards, including heat stress,
ionizing radiation and workplace violence. To find information
in the OSHA site about subjects that are not listed in the
index, there is a search
page, which makes it possible to find every document in
the OSHA website that contains any word or set of words. The
OSHA subject index and the search page can be accessed from
almost anywhere in the OSHA website, by clicking on "Index"
or "Search" in the top right corner of each page.
In addition to information about
specific hazards, the OSHA website is the place to look for
federal health and safety regulations, safety and health statistics,
lists of publications available by mail, and news about governmental
safety and health policy. A recent addition to the OSHA website
is called the "Workers'
Page" with useful information about safety and health
rights, how to file an OSHA complaint, and an OSHA complaint
form that can be filed over the internet.
Finding detailed inspection and violation
information
One of the most intriguing parts
of the OSHA website is its database of inspections and citations,
where you can obtain OSHA data concerning inspections and
citations of a specific employer, a specific industry, or
within a particular geographic area. OSHA inspection data
can be accessed through the OSHA home page by clicking on
"Library/Reading Room .... Statistics & Inspection
Data," and then on "Establishment Search."
To use the "Establishment
Search" form, you type the required information in the
blanks, beginning with the "Establishment" (the
name of the employer). When doing a search for data about
an employer, it is useful to conduct several searches, using
variations of the employer's name or the name of a parent
company or subsidiary, because the search engine looks for
names exactly as they are entered in the database. For example,
OSHA has inspection reports listed under "Macy's,"
and "Macys" (no apostrophe), and "Federated
Department Stores -- Macy's." Anyone who wants to see
all of them must do a separate search on each variation of
the name.
The OSHA search engine often
finds inspection reports for employers with names that are
similar to the one you are looking for; ask for "Morton"
and the search engine finds both "Morton International"
and "Lockheed Martin." That is because the OSHA
search engine ignores vowels "Morton" and
"Martin" are identical, as far as the search program
is concerned.
The OSHA inspection database
can also be searched by industrial sector, as codified by
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) codes. The U.S. Commerce
Department assigns every employer a 4-digit SIC code, based
on the nature of the business. You can search for very narrow
groups of businesses by using all four digits of the SIC code,
or you can search over wider industrial groups by using only
the first two or three digits of the SIC code.
For example, you can search
within a narrow group, such as the companies that manufacture
industrial gases, by using SIC Code 2813. You can widen the
search to include all the manufacturers of industrial inorganic
chemicals by dropping the last digit and searching on 281.
You can widen the search still farther by dropping the second-to-last
digit and searching on 28, which encompasses the entire chemical
industry. You can widen the search to cover all manufacturing
companies, by using the letter "D" instead of a
number. To learn the SIC code of a particular industry, or
the letter that stands for each of the ten major industry
groups, click on "SIC" on the left side of the "Inspections
within SIC" page.
As useful as the OSHA inspection
database is, it is not complete, because the site is never
completely up to date and because it contains some errors
such as misspelled company names (a misspelled name can make
a record extremely difficult to find) and incorrect SIC codes.
You should not assume that you will find all the relevant
and current OSHA inspection data there, even after a thorough
search of the website. If complete data is required, you need
to contact OSHA directly and make an information request.
Union websites
The safety and health pages
of some union websites can also be very useful. For example,
the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees
(AFSCME) website includes a detailed safety and health manual
that you can download, Safe
Jobs Now: An AFSCME Guide to Health and Safety in the Workplace,
plus a large collection of fact sheets and other practical
information. The Communications Workers of America has four
self-teaching tutorials on their website, with introductions
to "Researching Your Employer's Compliance History,"
"Researching Toxic Chemicals at Work," "Researching
Chemicals in Your Neighborhood," and "Researching
Disability Issues."
Another useful group of websites
are those belonging to universities, which often include many
pages of safety and health information, such as the University
of Maryland's Department of Environmental Safety and the
University
of Iowa's Hardin MetaDirectory of Occupational and Environmental
Health.
Listservs are another valuable
source of information on the internet. A listserv is an electronic
mailing list, which distributes e-mail messages to everyone
who is on the list. Some listservs are interactive, meaning
that anyone who is on the listserv can send e-mail messages
that go to everyone else on the list. Others are more like
traditional mailing lists; everyone on the list receives e-mail
is addressed to the list, but only the list sponsor can post
messages.
Most listservs are available
for the asking, and they are usually easy to quit, so it is
a good practice to enroll in any listserv that might be useful
and then quit if it doesn't live up to expectations. Two excellent
safety and health listservs are the NYCOSH
Update on Safety and Health and the Occupational
and Environmental Medicine listserve of the Duke University
Medical Center Department of Community and Family Medicine.
Happy surfing!
Made possible, in part, by
a grant from the New York State Department of Labor Occupational
Safety and Health Training and Education Program
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