|
-
20th April 06, 05:32 AM
#1
I work in Residential Construction, occassionally in Commercial Construction. I wear a kilt everyday.
I've been in construction for 14 years and have never heard of OSHA giving grief to anyone in Residential construction over what they wear. As someone else has already said, OSHA normally focuses their attention on larger works sites where heavy equipment is used, deep ditches are being dug, etc. OSHA is concerned about jobsite safety and is not likely to care what you are wearing other than what common sense dictates.
Wearing a kilt every day does have drawbacks that I live with. Sometimes I wear underwear just to add a bit of protection to my pieces parts. 2 weeks ago I got into Poison Ivy and was cursing my kilt for over a week, if you know what I mean. I haven't gone Regimental on the job sense.
My advice is this: Don't let anybody stop you from wearing your kilt ... use your own best judgement for when not to. OSHA regulations have a 'spirit' about them, so if you are keeping within the 'spirit' of their safety regs chances are you'll be just fine.
Of course, you're on your own if you get a ticket. LOL!!
Chris Webb
-
-
20th April 06, 06:21 AM
#2
In the old system, OSHA did concentrate on commercial construction. That is not necessarily still the case. Here in Kentucky KY OSH has hires 26 dedicated residential inspectors, so don't assume you fly under the radar just by virtue of being a residential builder.
One place shorts, and by extension kilts, are banned from concrete jobs. Chemical burns are a known hazard, so bare legs are banned. If there is no hazard, you would be OK, just know the hazards.
David
-
-
21st April 06, 12:05 AM
#3
Our company is pretty small. There is the boss, one office staff who has errends of his own to run, me the parts runner and guy who takes out the trash, and about a dozen plumbers.
My boss has pretty consistently poked fun at the kilt (to the point where I could likely threaten harassment if I really wanted) but has only said to wear pants on the one food production plant that we did. There I had to stay in the pickup if I had a kilt on. Otherwise, he has had no official problem with it.
I probably will e-mail and/or call the local OSHA office and see what the policy on uncovered legs for being on a work site is, though not actually working on site if it makes a difference.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks