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Episode 49 - Training for Process Safety Management (PSM)
Episode 49

Episode 49 - Training for Process Safety Management (PSM)

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

May 9, 20235m 39s

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Show Notes

Episode 49 explains the Training element of OSHA’s Process Safety Management Standard (29 CFR 1910.119). Dr. Ayers focuses on what training must cover, who must be trained, how often, and why training quality—not just completion—is what actually protects workers.

The core message: PSM training isn’t about checking a box. It’s about ensuring people can operate and maintain hazardous processes safely and consistently.

  🧭 Purpose of the PSM Training Element

The training requirement ensures that employees:

  • Understand the hazards of the chemicals and processes

  • Know how to operate equipment safely

  • Can recognize abnormal conditions

  • Know what to do in emergencies

  • Follow procedures consistently

Training is the bridge between process safety information and safe operations.

  👥 Who Must Be Trained

Episode 49 clarifies that training applies to:

  • Operators involved in PSM‑covered processes

  • Maintenance personnel working on covered equipment

  • Any employee whose actions can affect process safety

Contractors have separate training requirements under the contractor element, but host employers must verify their training.

  📘 What Training Must Cover

Dr. Ayers highlights several required content areas:

1. Process‑Specific Hazards
  • Chemical hazards

  • Fire and explosion risks

  • Toxicity and exposure concerns

  • Operating limits

2. Operating Procedures

Employees must be trained on:

  • Startup

  • Shutdown

  • Normal operations

  • Emergency operations

  • Temporary operations

3. Safe Work Practices

Including:

  • Lockout/tagout

  • Hot work

  • Confined space entry

  • Line breaking

  • PPE requirements

4. Emergency Response

Workers must know:

  • Alarm meanings

  • Evacuation routes

  • Shutdown responsibilities

  • Communication expectations

  🔄 Initial vs. Refresher Training Initial Training

Required for:

  • New employees

  • Employees newly assigned to a PSM process

  • Employees returning after extended absence

Refresher Training

OSHA requires:

  • At least every 3 years

  • More frequently if needed based on performance or process changes

Refresher training must ensure employees retain and apply the required knowledge.

  📝 Evaluation of Training Effectiveness

Episode 49 emphasizes that OSHA requires employers to verify understanding, not just attendance.

Evaluation methods may include:

  • Demonstrations

  • Written tests

  • Verbal assessments

  • Field observations

  • Skills demonstrations

Documentation must show that employees understand the training—not just that they were present.

  🧪 Common Training Failures Highlighted in the Episode

Dr. Ayers calls out typical weaknesses:

  • Training that is too generic

  • Overreliance on PowerPoint lectures

  • No evaluation of understanding

  • Procedures not updated before training

  • Training not aligned with actual operations

  • Workers trained on outdated or incorrect information

  • No follow‑up when employees demonstrate gaps

These failures often show up as root causes in incident investigations.

  🔗 How Training Connects to Other PSM Elements

Training is tightly linked to:

  • Process Safety Information (PSI) — training must reflect accurate PSI

  • Operating Procedures — employees must be trained on current procedures

  • MOC — changes require updated training

  • Mechanical Integrity — maintenance personnel must be trained on hazards

  • Incident Investigation — training gaps often emerge as causal factors

Training is the human performance engine of PSM.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

  • Ensure training is accurate, current, and process‑specific

  • Verify employees understand—not just attend

  • Provide time and resources for meaningful training

  • Update training whenever procedures or processes change

  • Use incident and near‑miss data to improve training

  • Treat training as a risk‑control system, not a compliance task

The episode’s core message: Training is where process safety becomes human behavior. If training is weak, the entire PSM system is weak.