Teens Need Workplace Safety Training

In recognition of May’s “Safe Jobs for Youth Month, the Washington Department of Labor and Industries (L&I) is reminding employers to provide safe workplaces for young workers, particularly as the summer hiring season nears.

On average, 79 young workers are injured every working day in Washington state — or about three every hour, according to L&I. Creating safe workplaces for teens includes providing adequate training, following laws that prohibit teens from operating dangerous equipment and, in general, giving them extra supervision and lots of repetition, particularly when they’re new to the job.

“Teens are eager to work and may not question a workplace situation that doesn’t seem right, so we must do all we can to create safe workplaces for them,” said Michael Silverstein, assistant director of L&I’s Division of Occupational Safety & Health.

Some of the workplace rules that cover teen workers include:

Employers who hire teens must obtain a minor work endorsement on their master business license, as well as a parent authorization form for the job assignments and hours the teen will be working.

Silverstein noted that L&I is in the third year of a program to raise awareness among teens of the importance of workplace safety. The “Injured Young Worker Speakers Program” brings workers who were severely injured on the job as teenagers to high schools around the state. Tips can be found at www.TeenWorkers.Lni.wa.gov.

Source: L&I