Confined Space Competent Person Training Kit

$425.00

Confined Space Competent Person Online Training, designed by trainers with 15+ years of onsite training experience. The estimated time for this training is 90-120 minutes.


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Description

Confined Space Competent Person Training (The Best on the Market)

Looking for a cost-effective and convenient way to offer training for your employees or customers? Our diy safety program (available on CD, USB Drive, or via Instant Download) provides simple instructions with all the training materials necessary to train and certify your employees and make them regulation aligned. Learn more about what comes with the kit.


Our Confined Spaces Safety Training course is built to regulation guidelines. This class discusses these topics:

  • Basic equipment and how to inspect it
  • Atmospheric testing and monitoring
  • Safe operations, including confined space entry procedures
  • Common hazards like IDLH atmospheres
  • Rescue techniques
  • More!

This training course is OSHA-aligned and covers OSHA’s classroom training requirements. Each class contains sections on equipment and anatomy, maintenance and inspections, safe operations and stability, common hazards, and more. This presentation includes intermittent practice quiz questions to prepare for the final written exam included with the course. Upon successful completion of the course and exam, you will have immediate online access to your certificate of completion. You have the option to download the practical evaluations for the specific course. Although the practical evaluation is not a required part of the online course, we strongly recommend completing it under the supervision of your employer to ensure your mastery of the safety training topics.

Estimated Training Length: Because everyone learns and progresses at different speeds, the amount of time you spend taking this training will vary. However, the estimated time for this training is 150 – 180 min.

Intended Audience:

  • Employees
  • Supervisors

This course covers the following OSHA standards:

  • 29 CFR 1910.146 – Permit-Required Confined Spaces
  • 29 CFR 1910.146(j) – Entry Supervisor
  • 29 CFR 1915 Subpart B – Confined and Enclosed Spaces and Other Dangerous Atomspheres in Shipyard Employment
  • 29 CFR 1926.800(j) – Air Quality and Monitoring
  • 29 CFR 1926 Subpart AA – Confined Spaces in Construction


OSHA Defines ?Confined Space?

A confined space has a limited or restricted means of entry or exit and is large enough for an employee to enter and perform their assigned work. However, it is not designed for employees to work inside for long periods of time or frequently over a period of time (OSHA). Some common examples of confined spaces are:

  • Underground vaults
  • Tanks
  • Storage bins
  • Pits and diked areas
  • Vessels
  • Silos

Confined spaces in any industry can pose serious dangers to employees working in and around them. In the United States alone, more than 1,000 employees have died from confined space-related injuries in the last decade. This is why it?s important that you understand how to protect yourself and others from the hazards associated with working in confined spaces.

Permit-Required Confined Space

It is important to note that OSHA requires employers to evaluate their workplaces to determine if spaces are permit-required confined spaces, often called ?permit spaces.?

The guidelines OSHA has in place define a permit space as a confined space that:

  • Contains, or has the potential to contain, a hazardous atmosphere.
  • Contains material that has the potential to engulf an entrant.
  • Has walls that converge inward.
  • Has floors that slope downward or taper into a smaller area.
  • Contains any other recognized safety or health hazards.
A non-permit confined space is ?a confined space that does not contain?hazards [or] have the potential to contain any hazard capable of causing death or any serious physical harm? (OSHA). A non-permit space is a confined space that does not require an employee to have an entry permit to work inside.

What is a Competent Person?

OSHA describes a competent person as someone ?who is capable of identifying existing and predictable hazards in the surroundings or working conditions which are [unsafe].? Many industries have standards that require a competent person, including:

  • General Industry
  • Construction
  • Maritime

What Training Do I Need to Become a Competent Person?

The criteria for a ?competent person? depends on the situation that the person is working in. Meaning that, to be a competent person when it comes to working in a confined space, you must have completed a training associated with that topic. A competent person also must be designated by the employer as the competent person.

Confined Space Entry Training Requirements

Employees who are chosen to work in confined spaces are called entrants. Entrants should be trained to:

  • Recognize hazards.
  • Alert attendants about the presence of a hazard.
  • Understanding warning signs.
  • Wear, store, and use suitable personal protective equipment (PPE).
  • Communicate with attendants who are outside the confined space.
  • Conduct self-rescue methods in emergency situations.

By way of training or experience, a competent person should know about all the associated hazards of working inside a confined space. Their role is to watch for, recognize, and then avoid or eliminate the hazard. Not only do they look out for themselves, but they are also responsible for their fellow employees working in the same area.

Confined Space Rescue Training

When working in a confined space, both employers and employees need to consider what to do if someone gets injured, incapacitated, or trapped while in a confined space and needs to be rescued.

Conducting a rescue in a confined space involves confronting unique and difficult hazards. Failure to plan properly can mean the difference between a successful rescue and a body recovery.

Most confined space rescue training courses will teach employees how to create an efficient rescue plan in case of emergencies using the following five steps:

  1. Understand the emergency – Emergencies come in many forms, so the first consideration should be ?what happened
  2. Conduct a site assessment – Before any confined space entry takes place on a site, those spaces have to be identified, classified, and labeled. This is essential in determining what special equipment or procedures should be involved when conducting a rescue operation.
  3. Ensure that permit procedures are in place and working – OSHA requires employers to develop a permitting system for allowing workers into confined spaces. Permits have to include information about the location, authorized personnel, and hazard control. This information can be invaluable to the rescue process.
  4. Create the rescue plan – Rescue plan parameters should be decided on and documented for all confined spaces. Once the parameters are in place, employees should be trained on them.
  5. Drills – It is not enough to create a plan. Emergency preparedness means the plan has been tested and the involved parties have had a chance to practice.

A competent person, when it comes to confined space rescue, follows the same role as a competent person when it comes to simply completing a task within a confined space. They are there to watch out for, recognize, and avoid or eliminate any hazards that may be present during a rescue.

Our Courses

After reading about the training standards and certificates, you must wonder how to get started. You are in luck because you can start here at Hard Hat Training, where our teams work hard every day to provide you with the best and most affordable training courses!

Personalizing Safety

Here at Hard Hat Training, our goal is to make safety training accessible and affordable. Our vision is to help companies minimize accidents and fatalities through consistent, in-depth training. Our training materials are frequently updated, enabling us to offer the most thorough, up-to-date, easy-to-use, and OSHA Aligned training options on the market today.

Online Courses & Other Formats

All of our courses comply with OSHA Requirements and contain all necessary safety information. Our Content Development and Quality Assurance teams spend hours researching so that we can provide you with the best and most vital information. We have Confined Space, Confined Space 8-hour, and Confined Space Rescue safety courses available.

We offer our courses in different learning formats. We offer in-person courses, online courses, training kits, as well as our unique train-the-trainer courses. Our course catalog presents companies with over 200 training topics, and each course is fully narrated and organized to keep the mind engaged. Our narration reads exactly what is written down to help employees with visual or hearing impairments. We also offer courses in Spanish!


Confined Space Competent Person Training Online

Get confined space competent person training and certification today. Our online training provides a quick, simple and effective way to get yourself or your workers OSHA aligned with confined space competent person certification in hand. We’ve been providing confined space competent person training solutions for individuals, safety managers, and business owners for over 15 years. Don’t settle for courses that promise certification, but are only 15 minutes long. Those types of courses often come up short when OSHA comes for an audit. Our robust training approach gives an interactive experience. Learners are able to retain the information and apply it on the job site, preventing costly fines from OSHA. Our course takes just over one hour to complete. Learners get confined space competent person certification instantly upon completion.

Safety training is an investment. That is why hundreds of companies and individuals all over the world trust the Hard Hat Training Series for their online training needs.

 

Why buy our Confined Space Competent Person Training?

  • Complete Training: First and foremost our goal is to keep you safe and save you money. Don’t risk getting expensive OSHA fines because you settled for a sub-par training program that didn’t cover safety topics in depth. Train using a program that helps you retain what is learned so that it is put into practice on job sites.
  • Cost-Effective: Hiring a trainer to come on-site can be expensive. In contrast, our online curriculum lowers costs while still providing a professional training experience. (Check out our bulk pricing tiers below!)
  • Records Tracking System: We offer an easy to use management system so that if you have multiple students who are receiving the training you can have access to all records, confined space competent person certificates, observation guides and more! (contact us if you would like us to quickly create a company account for you)
  • Train?Your Way: You can use this online confined space competent person training program for new hire training, refresher training or train remotely. Access it from anywhere and work on your schedule.
  • Interactive Learning: Special reminders and quiz questions throughout the course prep students for the final exam so that it is passed the first time.
  • Corporate License:?Do you want to host this course on your own server? Contact us about obtaining broadcasting rights for this and any of our other online courses.

A competent person in regards to a confined space is responsible for the safety of other employees.

  • There are four characteristics that are important to know when working in a confined space.
  • By way of training or experience, a competent person should know about all the associated hazards of working inside a confined space.
  • The role of a competent person is to watch for, recognize, and then avoid or eliminate the hazard.

The Best Confined Space Competent Person Training

OSHA Defines ?Confined Space?

A confined space has a limited or restricted means of entry or exit and is large enough for an employee to enter and perform their assigned work. However, it is not designed for employees to work inside for long periods of time or frequently over a period of time (OSHA
). Some common examples of confined spaces are:

  • Underground vaults
  • Tanks
  • Storage bins
  • Pits and diked areas
  • Vessels
  • Silos

Confined spaces in any industry can pose serious dangers to employees working in and around them. In the United States alone, more than 1,000 employees have died from confined space-related injuries in the last decade. This is why it?s important that you understand how to protect yourself and others from the hazards associated with working in confined spaces.

Permit-Required Confined Space

It is important to note that OSHA requires employers to evaluate their workplaces to determine if spaces are permit-required confined spaces, often called ?permit spaces.?

The guidelines OSHA has in place define a permit space as a confined space that:

  • Contains, or has the potential to contain, a hazardous atmosphere.
  • Contains material that has the potential to engulf an entrant.
  • Has walls that converge inward.
  • Has floors that slope downward or taper into a smaller area.
  • Contains any other recognized safety or health hazards.

Non-Permit Required Confined Space

A non-permit confined space is ?a confined space that does not contain?hazards [or] have the potential to contain any hazard capable of causing death or any serious physical harm? (OSHA). A non-permit space is a confined space that does not require an employee to have an entry permit to work inside.

What is a Competent Person?

OSHA describes a competent person as someone ?who is capable of identifying existing and predictable hazards in the surroundings or working conditions which are [unsafe].? Many industries have standards that require a competent person, including:

  • General Industry
  • Construction
  • Maritime

What Training Do I Need to Become a Competent Person?

The criteria for a ?competent person? depends on the situation that the person is working in. Meaning that, to be a competent person when it comes to working in a confined space, you must have completed a training associated with that topic. A competent person also must be designated by the employer as the competent person.

Confined Space Entry Training Requirements

Employees who are chosen to work in confined spaces are called entrants. Entrants should be trained to:

  • Recognize hazards.
  • Alert attendants about the presence of a hazard.
  • Understanding warning signs.
  • Wear, store, and use suitable personal protective equipment (PPE).
  • Communicate with attendants who are outside the confined space.
  • Conduct self-rescue methods in emergency situations.

By way of training or experience, a competent person should know about all the associated hazards of working inside a confined space. Their role is to watch for, recognize, and then avoid or eliminate the hazard. Not only do they look out for themselves, but they are also responsible for their fellow employees working in the same area.

Confined Space Rescue Training

When working in a confined space, both employers and employees need to consider what to do if someone gets injured, incapacitated, or trapped while in a confined space and needs to be rescued.

Conducting a rescue in a confined space involves confronting unique and difficult hazards. Failure to plan properly can mean the difference between a successful rescue and a body recovery.

Most confined space rescue training courses will teach employees how to create an efficient rescue plan in case of emergencies using the following five steps:

  • Understand the emergency – Emergencies come in many forms, so the first consideration should be ?what happened
  • Conduct a site assessment – Before any confined space entry takes place on a site, those spaces have to be identified, classified, and labeled. This is essential in determining what special equipment or procedures should be involved when conducting a rescue operation.
  • Ensure that permit procedures are in place and working – OSHA requires employers to develop a permitting system for allowing workers into confined spaces. Permits have to include information about the location, authorized personnel, and hazard control. This information can be invaluable to the rescue process.
  • Create the rescue plan – Rescue plan parameters should be decided on and documented for all confined spaces. Once the parameters are in place, employees should be trained on them.
  • Drills – It is not enough to create a plan. Emergency preparedness means the plan has been tested and the involved parties have had a chance to practice.
  • A competent person, when it comes to confined space rescue, follows the same role as a competent person when it comes to simply completing a task within a confined space. They are there to watch out for, recognize, and avoid or eliminate any hazards that may be present during a rescue.

    Our Courses

    After reading about the training standards and certificates, you must wonder how to get started. You are in luck because you can start here at Hard Hat Training, where our teams work hard every day to provide you with the best and most affordable training courses!

    Personalizing Safety

    Here at Hard Hat Training, our goal is to make safety training accessible and affordable. Our vision is to help companies minimize accidents and fatalities through consistent, in-depth training. Our training materials are frequently updated, enabling us to offer the most thorough, up-to-date, easy-to-use, and OSHA Aligned training options on the market today.

    Online Courses & Other Formats

    All of our courses comply with OSHA Requirements and contain all necessary safety information. Our Content Development and Quality Assurance teams spend hours researching so that we can provide you with the best and most vital information. We have Confined Space, Confined Space 8-hour, and Confined Space Rescue safety courses available.

    We offer our courses in different learning formats. We offer in-person courses, online courses, training kits, as well as our unique train-the-trainer courses. Our course catalog presents companies with over 200 training topics, and each course is fully narrated and organized to keep the mind engaged. Our narration reads exactly what is written down to help employees with visual or hearing impairments. We also offer courses in Spanish!

    Other Training Options:

    We offer two other types of training for this course. The other training types are online training and a train the trainer certification course. An identical final exam and OSHA-aligned safety training certificate applies, no matter which of the three format options you choose below.


    online safety training

    Online Training

    Our online trainings are great for those who want to learn at their own pace and on their own time. Online trainings can be completed from any location, eliminating the need for expensive seminars.

    Employers can assign employees specific trainings and keep track of their progress and exam scores. We also offer group trainings, company accounts, and even bulk discounts for businesses.

    View Online Training
    train the trainer safety training

    Currently Viewing: Training Kit

    Our kits are the perfect resource for those who want the freedom of training employees themselves. Unlike traditional trainings that are taken once, the kit offers a complete initial training as well as activities and materials to train employees long after they’ve been certified.

    These materials include practical evaluations, exams, toolbox trainings, accident profiles, ect.

    This is the current option

    train the trainer safety training

    Train the Trainer

    Train-the-trainer courses allow employers to take full control of the training process. Employees who take these courses are fully certified to use the training kit and train others.

    This means that employers can hold training seminars and courses without the need for third-party trainers. We will also include a training presentation and materials to train others.

    View Train the Trainer

    Our training kit materials provide everything needed to deliver effective safety training. After years of refinement, we’ve ensured they cover the latest requirements, regulations, and hazards associated with operating equipment.

    Our courses are reviewed and updated annually to align with applicable OSHA, EEOC, HHS, STC, MSHA, and other standards. To see which standards are addressed in this course, visit the course description tab where all applicable standards are listed.

    Train the Trainer courses equip employees to train others. The TTT kits include all the necessary materials – presentations, exams, assessments, toolbox talks, and more – for conducting training. These kits allow you to adjust the training to suit your worksite requirements. The materials can be prepared and ready for use in minutes.

    Online Safety Training FAQs

    What does each online class cover?

    Generally speaking, each course covers an overview of the topic, detailed explanation of relevant equipment, safe operating practices, common hazards to avoid, and hazard control measures.

    How long is the course?

    Trainees go at their own pace, but in general each class (including the exam) takes anywhere from 2 to 2.5 hours. We recommend planning for two or more so you don’t end up rushing through the exam.

    Are these courses OSHA-aligned?

    All Hard Hat Training online courses were designed to adhere to OSHA and ANSI training requirements. But it is important to understand that by OSHA-aligned, we mean it follows best practices and safety principles put forth by OSHA. In an online format, it is not possible to cover every code for every situation or hazard across every industry. For this reason, our safety training solutions are tools to further knowledge and help employers train and/or certify their crew.

    However, just because a course or program is OSHA-aligned does not necessarily mean a company will be aligned or avoid citations if OSHA were to audit them. There is much more that goes into collective company alignment with OSHA. For example, workers need to be observed applying what they learned in the classroom in the field. This observation/practical exam should be done by trainers, supervisors, or other designated competent persons. Whether you use our training kits or online courses, we provide guides to help employers do this.

    Other steps for ultimate alignment may include but are not limited to addressing with your crew any gaps in the training or additional hazards specific to your work situation; creating, training on, and enforcing written safety programs (also known as plans or procedures); and performing regular inspections and risk assessments.

    Are the e-learning classes up-to-date with OSHA standards?

    Yes, Hard Hat Training online courses incorporate the latest OSHA standards. As standards change, we make changes to the courses.

    Does this course certify or qualify me?

    There is a lot of confusion among operators and even companies about what it means to be certified or qualified. Simply put, no, a course does not certify anyone. It is the employer’s responsibility to make sure an employee is properly trained, and it is also his or her responsibility to say when the employee is “qualified” or “competent.” Our online courses and training kits are just a tool to help them in doing so.

    According to OSHA, proper training must include a classroom portion, including a written exam, as well as a practical hands-on portion/exam wherein the operator is observed operating the machine. Our courses provide the classroom portion of the training. The safety administrator of the company will have access to a checklist which can be used to observe the trainee on the machine. When done successfully, the administrator signs the bottom of the form. At this point, unless further training is required by your employer, you have done everything required by OSHA to be considered by your employer as “qualified” or “competent.”

    If I pass this class and exam, can I take my certification and get a job anywhere?

    See “Does this course certify or qualify me?” This will depend on your employer. Remember, it is their responsibility to see that you are trained and if there is ever an accident, it is they who will have to prove to OSHA that they trained you sufficiently. Because of this, while some smaller businesses may simply accept your certificate and a copy of your test, they will often require you to go through their own training program. This is their right to do so. It is their further responsibility to train you in accordance with the job, site, equipment, etc.

    How long is the training good for?

    The timeframe for how long training remains valid depends on the specific topic and OSHA training guidelines. Heavy machinery operators, for instance, need to recertify every three years, while other training courses may have different renewal periods. The expiration date for each training course will be printed on your certificate of completion for reference so you know when to take the training again.

    Will I get a certificate?

    Yes, upon successful completion of the course and exam, you will have immediate online access to your certificate of completion. You have the option to download the practical evaluations for your specific course. Although the practical evaluation is not required for you to earn online course completion credit, we strongly recommend completing it under the supervision of your employer to ensure your mastery of the safety training topics.

    How many people can use this course? Can I play it for several employees at the same time?

    Only one employee can take the course. There are many reasons for this, but most importantly, the course is designed to train one employee per OSHA regulations. Also, there is an online final exam at the end that will be linked to the trainee assigned. OSHA requires proof of training, and if multiple people were to sit in on that one course, they would not get credit for taking it.

    Are SCORM/Tin Can options available for use on our own company LMS?

    All our online courses are SCORM-compatible and can be easily uploaded to your company’s current SCORM-compliant LMS using our SCORM Cloud dispatch service. We do not offer direct SCORM file access to our courses. If you would like more information about how SCORM dispatch works and whether it would be a good fit for your business needs, please contact our sales team at (888) 360-8764.

    Can I become a Hard Hat Training reseller?

    We do have reseller options available. Visit Become a Hard Hat Safety Affiliate Partner to learn more.

    How do I look up my certificate of completion?

    So, you have already purchased a course from us, taken the online training, and passed the certification exam with flying colors. Now what?

    Simply print a copy of your course completion certificate for your employer and keep a copy for your records. You can log in to your LMS account anytime to print your certificate after you have completed the training.

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    Train a Trainer

    Along with a presentation PPT kit, you will recive an online training course that will certifiy your trainer to train others--only $250 more.

    TTT COURSES
    online safety training

    Print Details

    Want to print training course information and show it to others? See our informational, printable PDF document and print ourself a copy.

    View Document
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    Demo Course

    If further information is needed, companies can request to demo the training course. Call (888) 360-8764 to request this service.

    (888) 360-8764

    How Does the Training Kit Work?

    Have an employee use the kit’s main PowerPoint presentation to instruct the trainees. (any person you, the employer, deems competent may conduct this). Distribute the written exam to each trainee individually. Gather the completed exams and use the included answer key to grade them.

    We use a passing grade of 80% as a guideline, but as the employer you are free to adjust it however you like. Administer the practical exam to each trainee. (We suggest correcting any mistakes and having the trainee initial the edit on the practical exam sheet.) Use the included template to print certificates and wallet cards for those who passed. Note the expiration date and be sure to re-train and re-certify before then.

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