🪵 Flooring Safety
Topic: Chemical exposure, knee protection, respiratory hazards, slip prevention, power tools, ergonomics, and silica Duration: 7–10 minutes Required: OSHA 29 CFR 1926.1153 (Silica), 1910.1200 (Hazard Communication), 1926 Subpart I (PPE)
The Stats
- Knee injuries from prolonged kneeling — flooring installers have among the highest rates of knee disorders; many require surgery or early retirement
- Silica exposure from concrete grinding/prep — respirable silica causes silicosis; OSHA estimates 2.3 million workers exposed
- Chemical exposure — Adhesives and sealers contain VOCs and solvents; skin and respiratory irritation, dizziness, and long-term effects
- Slip/fall incidents — Wet adhesives, fresh sealers, and uneven substrates cause sprains, fractures, and head injuries
- Power tool injuries — Saws, grinders, and nailers cause lacerations, amputations, and eye injuries when used improperly
OSHA requires: Silica exposure control when grinding concrete; SDS for adhesives/sealers; PPE as specified by hazard assessment; eye and hearing protection for power tools.
Chemical Exposure (Adhesives, Sealers, Coatings)
Before Use
- Read the SDS — Know hazards, PPE, and first aid
- Ventilation — Open doors, windows; use fans; avoid confined spaces
- Skin protection — Chemical-resistant gloves; long sleeves if needed
- Eye protection — Safety glasses or goggles when splashing is possible
During Use
- Minimize skin contact — Wash immediately if contact occurs
- No eating/drinking — In application area
- Curing time — Allow adequate cure before heavy traffic or next trade
Storage & Disposal
- Sealed containers — Keep lids on when not in use
- Proper disposal — Per SDS and local regulations
Knee Injuries (Prolonged Kneeling)
| Do | Don't |
|---|---|
| Use knee pads or kneeling mats | Kneel directly on hard surfaces |
| Take breaks every 20–30 minutes | Kneel for hours without rest |
| Alternate tasks (standing, kneeling) | Ignore knee pain or swelling |
| Use ergonomic tools (long-handled rollers) | Strain in awkward positions |
Knee pads — Choose padded or gel inserts; ensure proper fit and comfort.
Respiratory Hazards (Dust from Grinding & Sanding)
Silica from Concrete Prep
- Wet methods — Use water to suppress dust when grinding
- Vacuum — HEPA vacuum on grinders when possible
- Respirator — N95 minimum for dust; half-face or full-face if exposure exceeds limits
- Avoid breathing dust — Stay upwind; limit exposure time
General Dust
- Sanding — Use dust collection; respirator for fine dust
- Sweeping — Wet sweep or vacuum; avoid dry sweeping
Slip Hazards During Installation
| Hazard | Prevention |
|---|---|
| Wet adhesive | Barricade area; post "Wet Floor" signs; allow cure time |
| Fresh sealer | Keep foot traffic off until dry |
| Uneven substrate | Fill holes; level before install |
| Cords and hoses | Route out of walkways; use cord covers |
| Spills | Clean immediately; absorbent for adhesives |
Tool Safety (Power Saws, Grinders, Nailers)
Power Saws (Tiles, Hardwood)
- Guards — Keep blade guards in place and functional
- Blade — Correct blade for material; sharp and undamaged
- Hearing protection — Required when noise exceeds 85 dB
- Eye protection — Safety glasses or face shield
- Cords — Inspect for damage; use GFCI
Grinders
- Guard — Wheel guard in place
- Wheel — Correct type; not cracked or worn
- PPE — Face shield, hearing protection, respirator for dust
- Two-hand grip — Maintain control
Nailers / Staplers
- Safety trigger — Never bypass
- Direction — Never point at anyone
- Disconnect — Depressurize when not in use
- Jams — Disconnect before clearing
Ergonomic Injuries
- Lift correctly — Bend knees, keep load close; team lift heavy boxes
- Work height — Work at waist height when possible
- Stretch — Warm up; stretch neck, back, wrists, knees
- Vary tasks — Rotate between cutting, fitting, and installing
Discussion Questions
- What adhesives or sealers are we using today? Have we read the SDS?
- What knee protection are we using? Who has knee pads or kneeling mats?
- Are we grinding or sanding concrete? What's our silica control (wet, vacuum, respirator)?
- What power tools are we using? Are guards and PPE in place?
Today's Commitment
"I will use knee protection, read SDSs for chemicals, wear a respirator when creating dust, and keep guards on all power tools."
Sign-In
| Name | Signature | Company |
|---|---|---|
Presenter: _________________ Date: _________