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Fall Protection Program

Document Type: Program
Version: 1.0
Last Updated: February 2026
Distribute To: All Field Personnel, Supervisors, Safety Director


Purpose

Establish a comprehensive fall protection program to prevent falls, the leading cause of death in construction, and ensure OSHA compliance.


⚠️ CRITICAL INFORMATION

Falls Are the #1 Killer in Construction

  • 33%+ of all construction fatalities
  • Falls from elevation, not ground level
  • Most are preventable with proper protection

The 6-Foot Rule (OSHA Standard)

Fall protection is REQUIRED when working at heights of 6 feet or more above a lower level.

Some exceptions and variations:

  • Steel erection: 15 feet
  • Scaffolds: 10 feet
  • Residential (limited): 6 feet

Scope

This program applies to:

  • All employees working at heights of 6 feet or more
  • All work on elevated surfaces (roofs, scaffolds, ladders, aerial lifts)
  • All work near open holes, floor openings, wall openings
  • All work near leading edges

Fall Protection Methods

1. Guardrail Systems (Preferred)

Requirements:

  • Top rail: 42 inches (+/- 3 inches)
  • Mid rail: 21 inches
  • Toeboard: 3.5 inches (if needed)
  • Must withstand 200 lbs force

Use When:

  • Permanent or long-term work areas
  • Around floor/roof openings
  • Along leading edges (when feasible)

2. Safety Net Systems

Requirements:

  • Installed as close as practicable below work (max 30 feet)
  • Extend 8 feet beyond work area
  • Tested: 400 lb drop test

Use When:

  • Work at significant heights
  • PFAS not practical
  • Large open areas

3. Personal Fall Arrest Systems (PFAS)

Components:

  • Full body harness (NOT body belt)
  • Lanyard or self-retracting lifeline (SRL)
  • Anchor point (5,000 lb capacity or designed by PE)
  • Connectors (D-rings, snap hooks)

Requirements:

  • Limit fall to 6 feet
  • Total fall distance: 6 ft fall + 3.5 ft deceleration + harness stretch + worker height
  • Must not contact lower level

4. Positioning Device Systems

Requirements:

  • Limit free fall to 2 feet
  • 3,000 lb anchor or designed by PE
  • Secured to independent lifeline

Use When:

  • Working on vertical surfaces (rebar, walls)
  • Need hands-free work positioning

5. Warning Line Systems

Requirements:

  • 6 feet from edge (15 ft for roofing operations)
  • 34-39 inches high
  • Flagged every 6 feet
  • Must be monitored

Use When:

  • Low-slope roof work
  • Combined with other methods

Anchor Points

Anchor Point Requirements

System TypeRequired Strength
Fall Arrest5,000 lbs per employee OR designed by PE
Positioning3,000 lbs per employee OR designed by PE
Travel Restraint1,000 lbs per employee

Acceptable Anchors

  • Structural steel members
  • Engineered anchor points
  • Roof anchors (installed per manufacturer)
  • Horizontal lifelines (designed by PE)

Unacceptable Anchors

  • Guardrails
  • Electrical conduit
  • Plumbing pipes
  • Mechanical equipment
  • Anything not rated for fall protection

Equipment Inspection

Before Each Use (User Inspection)

Harness:

  • No frayed, cut, or damaged webbing
  • Buckles functional
  • D-rings not cracked or distorted
  • Labels legible
  • No chemical damage
  • No heat damage

Lanyard/SRL:

  • No frayed, cut, or damaged webbing/cable
  • Snap hooks function properly (double-locking)
  • No corrosion
  • SRL retracts and extends smoothly
  • Shock absorber not deployed

Remove from Service If:

  • Any visible damage
  • Involved in a fall
  • Exposed to chemicals/heat
  • Manufacturer defect
  • Past inspection date

Formal Inspection (Competent Person)

  • Frequency: Per manufacturer (minimum annually)
  • Document inspection
  • Tag or mark inspected equipment
  • Maintain inspection records

Training Requirements

Initial Training (Before First Use)

All employees exposed to fall hazards must be trained on:

  1. Nature of fall hazards

    • Identifying fall hazards on site
    • Consequences of falls
  2. Procedures for protection

    • Guardrails, safety nets, PFAS
    • When each is used
  3. Equipment use

    • Proper donning of harness
    • Lanyard/SRL connection
    • Anchor point selection
  4. Equipment inspection

    • Pre-use inspection
    • When to remove from service
  5. Limitations

    • Fall clearance calculations
    • Rescue procedures

Retraining Required When:

  • Workplace changes create new hazards
  • Equipment changes
  • Employee demonstrates lack of knowledge
  • After a fall or near-miss

Training Documentation

  • Record date and content
  • Trainer name
  • Employee signature
  • Retain for duration of employment

Specific Applications

Ladders

Fall Protection Required:

  • Fixed ladders over 24 feet: Cages or PFAS
  • Portable ladders: Maintain 3-point contact

Ladder Safety Rules:

  • Inspect before use
  • Proper angle (4:1 ratio)
  • Extend 3 feet above landing
  • Secure at top or bottom
  • Don't exceed capacity

Scaffolds

Fall Protection Required at 10 feet:

  • Guardrails (preferred)
  • PFAS on certain scaffold types

Scaffold Requirements:

  • Fully planked platforms
  • Guardrails on all open sides
  • Access via ladder or stair
  • Competent person inspection

Aerial Lifts (Boom Lifts, Scissor Lifts)

Requirements:

  • Boom lifts: PFAS required (attached to boom, not basket)
  • Scissor lifts: Guardrails standard, PFAS if guardrails removed
  • Body belt NOT allowed in aerial lifts

Rules:

  • Stand on platform floor only
  • No climbing on guardrails
  • Travel only with platform lowered

Roofing

Low-Slope Roofs (≤4:12 pitch):

  • Guardrails, OR
  • Warning lines + safety monitor, OR
  • Warning lines + PFAS

Steep Roofs (over 4:12 pitch):

  • Guardrails, OR
  • PFAS

Leading Edges

Definition: Edge of a floor, roof, or formwork where fall protection is incomplete

Requirements:

  • Controlled access zone (6-25 feet from edge)
  • PFAS for work within 6 feet of edge
  • Warning lines + monitor beyond 6 feet

Fall Rescue Plan

OSHA Requirement

Employers must provide for prompt rescue of employees in the event of a fall.

Rescue Options

1. Self-Rescue

  • Employee can reach stable surface
  • Equipment: Relief straps, stirrups

2. Assisted Rescue

  • Co-workers assist
  • Equipment: Rescue poles, tripods, ladders

3. Professional Rescue

  • Call 911
  • Used when internal rescue not feasible
  • May have delayed response

Suspension Trauma

What It Is: Blood pooling in legs during suspension can cause unconsciousness and death within minutes.

Prevention:

  • Rescue within 15 minutes
  • Employee use of suspension trauma straps
  • Keep legs moving if suspended

Rescue Plan Elements

  1. How to contact rescue services
  2. Available rescue equipment
  3. Trained rescue personnel
  4. Communication methods
  5. Equipment on site for rescue

Competent Person Requirements

Who is the Competent Person?

A person who:

  • Can identify fall hazards
  • Has authority to take corrective action
  • Has been trained in fall protection

Competent Person Responsibilities

  • Inspect work areas for hazards
  • Ensure proper equipment selection
  • Inspect equipment and systems
  • Monitor compliance
  • Stop unsafe work
  • Train employees

Fall Protection Plan (When Required)

When a Written Plan is Required

  • When conventional fall protection is infeasible
  • Must document alternative methods
  • Must be prepared by qualified person

Plan Contents

  • Site-specific hazards
  • Why conventional protection infeasible
  • Alternative protection methods
  • Fall protection equipment
  • Training requirements
  • Rescue procedures

Documentation Requirements

Maintain Records Of:

  • Equipment inspections
  • Training (dates, content, attendees)
  • Fall incidents and near-misses
  • Competent person designations
  • Rescue plan

Inspection Records

ItemFrequencyRetain
Harness/LanyardDaily by userLog
Formal inspectionAnnualUntil equipment disposed
Anchor pointsBefore each useProject file
GuardrailsDaily/weeklyProject file

Enforcement

Progressive Discipline

OffenseAction
FirstVerbal warning, retraining
SecondWritten warning
ThirdSuspension
FourthTermination

Zero Tolerance

Immediate removal from jobsite for:

  • Bypassing fall protection
  • Tampering with equipment
  • Falsifying inspection records

Fall Protection Checklist

Daily Site Walk

  • All floor openings covered or guarded
  • Guardrails in place where required
  • Workers at height have PFAS
  • Ladders properly set up
  • Scaffolds have guardrails
  • Leading edges protected

Before Elevated Work

  • Hazards identified
  • Protection method selected
  • Equipment inspected
  • Anchor points verified
  • Workers trained
  • Rescue plan in place

  • JHA Procedure
  • Scaffold Safety Program
  • Ladder Safety Procedure
  • Aerial Lift Procedure
  • Incident Reporting Procedure

Software Integration

Safety Meetings App:

  • Fall protection toolbox talks
  • Digital inspection checklists
  • Training documentation
  • Equipment tracking

BLDR Pro:

  • Fall hazard documentation
  • Incident reporting
  • Photo documentation

OSHA References

  • 29 CFR 1926.500-503 (Fall Protection)
  • 29 CFR 1926.1053 (Ladders)
  • 29 CFR 1926.451-454 (Scaffolds)
  • 29 CFR 1926.453 (Aerial Lifts)

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