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Description

Episode 99 brings JHAs to life by walking through real, practical examples of how to break down tasks, identify hazards, and select effective controls. Dr. Ayers focuses on showing safety leaders how to think through a job step‑by‑step so the JHA becomes a useful tool—not just a compliance document.


 
Core Message

A JHA is only valuable when it reflects how the work is actually done, not how it’s written in a procedure. Practical examples help teams see hazards they would otherwise miss.


 
Key Points from the Episode
1. JHAs Must Follow the Real Workflow

Dr. Ayers stresses that JHAs should be built by:

This prevents “paper safety” and reveals real‑world hazards.


 
2. Example: Changing a Light Fixture

Hazards identified include:

Controls might include:

This example shows how even simple tasks contain multiple hazard types.


 
3. Example: Using a Chemical Cleaner

Hazards include:

Controls include:

This example reinforces the need to consider routes of exposure.


 
4. Example: Operating a Forklift

Hazards include:

Controls include:

This example highlights the importance of environmental and behavioral factors.


 
5. Example: Machine Guarding Tasks

Hazards include:

Controls include:

This example shows how JHAs must account for energy control.


 
6. What These Examples Teach

Across all examples, Dr. Ayers emphasizes:

Practical examples help teams understand how to think through hazards systematically.


 
Practical Takeaway

A strong JHA breaks a job into steps, identifies the hazards in each step, and assigns controls that workers can actually use. Practical examples make the process real—and help teams build JHAs that genuinely reduce risk.