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In this episode we dive into what we believe to be sanitation's top risks. As always, these are one take, so they're raw with no scripts, and no idea what the other host will say. We hope you enjoy, including the brief detour into Joe's fear of heights and Glacier National Park... If it helped you, please like and share, it truly does help! Full episode description/summary below:
In this episode of Safe. Efficient. Profitable, the hosts dig into what sanitation safety really looks like when the plant shuts down, production leaves, and the “normal rules” quietly change. This isn’t a textbook discussion of OSHA buzzwords — it’s a hard-earned, experience-driven breakdown of the risks that actually hurt people during sanitation.
Rather than rattling off every possible hazard, the conversation focuses on the top three sanitation safety risks the hosts see over and over again in real facilities — plus one bonus risk that often gets ignored entirely.
1. Elevated Work:
The number one risk? Elevated work during sanitation. Not the clean, planned kind with proper lifts and fall protection — but the improvised kind that happens when equipment was never designed to be cleaned.
2. Lockout/Tagout Isn’t Simple
Sanitation introduces multiple risks at the same time, and lockout procedures that work during the day don’t always hold up at night. The hosts stress the importance of evaluating how lockout is actually performed, not just whether a policy exists.
3. Training: The Control That Fails Quietly
Why didn’t they pick confined space or ladder safety as a top risk? Because in their experience, training is the real control behind all of it.
Training needs to address the job function, not just the task. Workers need to know what to do when things don't go as planned or the unexpected happens.
Bonus Risk: Sleep, Fatigue, and Real Life
The hosts feel that fatigue has to be treated as a real safety variable, not an afterthought. Night-shift sanitation can’t be managed exactly like day-shift production — buffers and controls need to reflect human limits.
The Bottom Line
Sanitation is a different animal. Different risks. Different timing. If you want safer outcomes, you have to evaluate sanitation on its own terms.
As always, the hosts encourage listeners to take what’s helpful, leave the rest, and share the episode with anyone who might benefit — especially those who haven’t had these experiences yet.
Key Takeaways
Elevated work during sanitation is often improvised and underestimated
Lockout/tagout becomes more complex at night with multiple energy sources
Most sanitation incidents trace back to training gaps, not rule-breaking
Training must cover job function, not just task steps
Fatigue and sleep deprivation are real, measurable sanitation risks
Sanitation cannot be managed like production — it requires its own lens
This episode is intended for educational purposes. Solutions offered are not designed to take the place of an attorney or medical professional, and should not be taken as legal or medical advice. It is recommended that viewers consult a safety consultant, medical provider or an occupational safety legal team as applicable to help navigate their specific circumstances.
By Joe and Jen Allen of Allen Safety LLC5
1313 ratings
In this episode we dive into what we believe to be sanitation's top risks. As always, these are one take, so they're raw with no scripts, and no idea what the other host will say. We hope you enjoy, including the brief detour into Joe's fear of heights and Glacier National Park... If it helped you, please like and share, it truly does help! Full episode description/summary below:
In this episode of Safe. Efficient. Profitable, the hosts dig into what sanitation safety really looks like when the plant shuts down, production leaves, and the “normal rules” quietly change. This isn’t a textbook discussion of OSHA buzzwords — it’s a hard-earned, experience-driven breakdown of the risks that actually hurt people during sanitation.
Rather than rattling off every possible hazard, the conversation focuses on the top three sanitation safety risks the hosts see over and over again in real facilities — plus one bonus risk that often gets ignored entirely.
1. Elevated Work:
The number one risk? Elevated work during sanitation. Not the clean, planned kind with proper lifts and fall protection — but the improvised kind that happens when equipment was never designed to be cleaned.
2. Lockout/Tagout Isn’t Simple
Sanitation introduces multiple risks at the same time, and lockout procedures that work during the day don’t always hold up at night. The hosts stress the importance of evaluating how lockout is actually performed, not just whether a policy exists.
3. Training: The Control That Fails Quietly
Why didn’t they pick confined space or ladder safety as a top risk? Because in their experience, training is the real control behind all of it.
Training needs to address the job function, not just the task. Workers need to know what to do when things don't go as planned or the unexpected happens.
Bonus Risk: Sleep, Fatigue, and Real Life
The hosts feel that fatigue has to be treated as a real safety variable, not an afterthought. Night-shift sanitation can’t be managed exactly like day-shift production — buffers and controls need to reflect human limits.
The Bottom Line
Sanitation is a different animal. Different risks. Different timing. If you want safer outcomes, you have to evaluate sanitation on its own terms.
As always, the hosts encourage listeners to take what’s helpful, leave the rest, and share the episode with anyone who might benefit — especially those who haven’t had these experiences yet.
Key Takeaways
Elevated work during sanitation is often improvised and underestimated
Lockout/tagout becomes more complex at night with multiple energy sources
Most sanitation incidents trace back to training gaps, not rule-breaking
Training must cover job function, not just task steps
Fatigue and sleep deprivation are real, measurable sanitation risks
Sanitation cannot be managed like production — it requires its own lens
This episode is intended for educational purposes. Solutions offered are not designed to take the place of an attorney or medical professional, and should not be taken as legal or medical advice. It is recommended that viewers consult a safety consultant, medical provider or an occupational safety legal team as applicable to help navigate their specific circumstances.