Scaffold Safety (Awareness + Competent Person) - Training
Keeping crews safe and compliant while building, using, and inspecting scaffolds on wind, solar, BESS, data center, and industrial sites.
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23+ Years in Safety
Experience across wind, solar, BESS, data centers, heavy civil, utilities, and industrial projects.
Aligned with OSHA / NFPA / EM 385 / ISO
Work built to OSHA 1910/1926, NFPA 70E, EM 385-1-1, and ISO 14001/45001/9001 frameworks.
Nationwide Coverage
United States projects with mobilization to Canada (Ontario, Alberta, Saskatchewan), Puerto Rico, and Mexico.
for Renewable Energy & Construction
Scaffold Safety training teaches workers how to safely build, access, use, and inspect scaffold systems. This includes fall protection, load limits, platform requirements, tagging systems, and daily inspections. The Competent Person component focuses on identifying hazards, correcting unsafe conditions, and approving scaffold use.
This training exists to prevent falls, collapses, and unsafe access conditions while helping employers comply with OSHA scaffold standards.
OSHA / General Safety
Training for workers on safety practices, hazard awareness, reporting duties, and key OSHA rules for daily operations, along with common risk factors.
The Risks of Working Without Scaffold Safety Training
Wind, solar, BESS, data center, and heavy civil crews face increased hazards when scaffold training is not in place.
What Happens Without Scaffold Safety Training
Scaffold Safety Training
Fill out the form below, and our team will respond promptly with complete training details and next-step guidance.
On-site and remote instruction for renewables & industrial teams.
Our instructors teach workers how to build, inspect, and use scaffolds safely while recognizing hazards that lead to falls or structural failures. This training helps prevent incidents and supports daily compliance with OSHA scaffold rules.
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Get answers to common questions about OSHA 10–Hour Construction training.
It covers scaffold types, hazard recognition, fall protection, inspections, and safe access procedures.
Someone trained and authorized to identify hazards, correct unsafe conditions, and approve scaffold use.
OSHA recommends training when workers are new, scaffold types change, or hazards are introduced.
Falls, collapses, unstable foundations, missing guardrails, and unsecured planks.
Anyone who builds, uses, inspects, or works near scaffolds on an active job site.