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Description

Episode 57 explains the PSM Compliance Audit requirement under OSHA’s Process Safety Management Standard (29 CFR 1910.119). Dr. Ayers breaks down what the audit is, why it matters, how often it must be done, and what leaders must do to ensure it actually improves process safety rather than becoming a paperwork exercise.

The core message: A PSM compliance audit is not about passing or failing — it’s about finding weaknesses before they become catastrophic.


 
📋 What a PSM Compliance Audit Is

A PSM compliance audit is a formal, systematic review of how well an organization is meeting each element of the PSM standard.

The audit must:

It is not optional — it is a regulatory requirement.


 
⏳ How Often Audits Must Be Conducted

OSHA requires:

Dr. Ayers emphasizes that many organizations wait until the deadline, which weakens the value of the audit.


 
👥 Who Should Conduct the Audit

The episode stresses that the audit team must be:

Teams often include:


 
🔍 What the Audit Must Cover

A PSM audit must evaluate all 14 PSM elements, including:

The audit must verify both documentation and implementation.


 
🧪 Common Weaknesses Identified in Audits

Dr. Ayers highlights typical findings:

These weaknesses often indicate systemic issues, not isolated errors.


 
🛠️ Corrective Actions: The Most Important Part

The episode emphasizes that the audit is only valuable if findings lead to action.

Effective corrective action systems must:

OSHA expects employers to address audit findings promptly.


 
🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

The episode stresses that a weak audit is worse than no audit, because it creates false confidence.