Journalist and activist, Upton Sinclair, revealed the horrors of the food processing and manufacturing industry when he wrote "The Jungle" in 1906. Sinclair's groundbreaking book offered a behind-the-scenes look at life in Chicago's turn-of-the-century meatpacking plants, and his unflinching reporting led to industry-wide reform and improved safety efforts throughout the United States.
Workers in the food processing and manufacturing industry continue to face numerous health risks even with technological advances and new regulations.
What are some of the common hazards workers encounter, and how can employers keep them safe on the job?
Machines used to clean, process, and package food are wrought with risks and hazards. Each year, numerous U.S. workers are killed in machine-related accidents, and countless others are injured.
These workers face a number of hazards, including conveyors with moving or exposed parts, collapsing structures, falling objects, and compressed equipment. It's important to know these dangers to better improve job site safety.
For all the dangers that come with high-tech machinery, a few risks are more common than most. Those include:
Conveyors are common in the food processing and manufacturing industries, and visual communication can protect workers from hot surfaces, exposed and moving parts, pressurized systems, and more.
The Conveyor Equipment Manufacturers Association (CEMA) has developed a standardized safety labeling system to keep workers safe around conveyors; these designs comply with standards established by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and use three signal words to communicate the seriousness of a hazard:
The Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS) reported that workers sustained 839 fatalities from exposure to harmful substances or environments in 2022, and many of those involved the toxic chemical anhydrous ammonia.
Throughout the United States, anhydrous ammonia is a popular refrigerant in food processing and manufacturing facilities. You'll find the substance in breweries, juice and soft drink processing facilities, meat processing plants, and other food processing plants.
Despite that ubiquity, ammonia poses numerous risks to workers. Those hazards include:
For a safer environment, U.S.-based food processing and manufacturing plants must use chemical resistant labels for all pipes that transport ammonia in accordance with International Institute for Ammonia Refrigeration (IIAR) Bulletin No. 114, the accepted standard for labeling ammonia refrigeration systems.
The standard requires employers to mark system components, such as compressors, pumps, and receivers, and maintains that all ammonia pipe labels include the following five components:
These Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) compliant labels must include a component identifier and indicate the pressure level, as well.
Slip, trip, and fall hazards are among the most common causes of injury in both the food manufacturing industry and U.S. workplaces in general. According to the BLS, roughly 1,000 workers were fatally injured in slips, trips, and falls in 2022.
Given the high volume of liquids used in food manufacturing and processing, workers are regularly exposed to wet and unsafe surfaces. Workers can easily slip in puddles of water, trip over uneven surfaces, or fall when trying to access a platform.
OSHA's standard for walking-working surfaces, 29 CFR 1910.22, requires the following for ensuring clean working areas:
Floor marking and wayfinding tape is one of the easiest, most efficient solutions for mitigating slip, trip, and fall hazards.
In particular, you can improve stability in wet and slippery conditions with textured floor tape for more efficient wayfinding signage. Here's how some of our tapes help workers stay upright, safe, and mobile:
How can you maintain a safe food processing facility, improve efficiency, and keep facility workers safe? The DuraLabel Kodiak Max Industrial Sign and Label Print System, a two-color printing machine, is loaded with LabelForge Pro that creates standardized signs and labels that meet regulatory requirements.
Whether you need safety signs, pipe markers, or equipment labels�the Kodiak Max is ready to meet your needs. Get help crafting a system that will provide the safety communication for your facility. Call 1-888-402-8820 and one of our experts will guide you through the process.
DuraLabel's free OSHA Signage Quick Start Guide offers in-depth, best practices for labeling your facility according to OSHA and ANSI requirements.
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