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I believe in learning from other people; their success and failures. In regards to Forklifts I am always looking for the new technology that will make the work safer and easier. In addition I look at the accidents and causes.
In review of the accidents the common denominators I find are:
1. Attitude/Maturity-Person is below age or does not have the maturity to operate a forklift that can cause millions of damage to your company and just quit afterwards. Leaving people there to clean up the mess and a hit on managers judgments.
2. High Speed-At turns, different surfaces, and lack of visibility.
3. Center of Gravity of load and forklift-This is difficult for personnel with low maturity and attitude which become a higher risk for an accident.
4. Management-No safety training, planning, program and not supervising the person to do the work safely.
5. Not using safety devices-No seat belts. People jumping from forklifts causing most deaths.

Personnel working in warehouses to maintain the work and operate machinery to a high and safe standard is difficult. The budgeting for the warehouse salary is low since it is normally a Non Revenue section. New personnel should be held on probation for at least a pay period to observe their ability to be effective and safe before putting them on a $10-$100K forklift with a possibility of injuring or killing a person.
  • Posted 3 May 2016 10:48
  • By Monster
  • joined 3 May'16 - 1 message
  • Texas, United States

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In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we look at MHEDA’s Q3 Economic Advisory Report which reveals current resilience in the US materials handling sector... Continue reading
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The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".
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Fact of the week
The word "okay" (or its abbreviation "OK") originated as a humorous misspelling. In the 1830s, a fad in Boston involved using abbreviations of intentionally misspelled phrases. "OK" stood for "oll korrect," a playful mispronunciation of "all correct".