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If you’re working in Georgia—whether you’re on a roof in Savannah, climbing a telecom tower outside Macon, or walking a warehouse mezzanine in Atlanta—there’s one rule that never changes: If you can fall, OSHA expects you to know how not to. And because Georgia follows federal OSHA (there’s no state-run OSHA plan here), the rules

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you’ve spent even one day working on a Florida construction site, warehouse, solar installation, or roofing job, you already know this: Florida does not play nice with heights. The sun beats down on you, the humidity fogs your safety glasses, and that roof you’re standing on? It heats up like a frying pan by

Mike
December 1, 2025

Let me tell you something upfront: choosing between in-person and on-site fall protection training sounds like a small decision… until you’re the one responsible for making sure an entire crew stays OSHA-compliant and doesn’t end up one slip away from a workers’ comp nightmare. I’ve taken both types of training. I’ve taught both. I’ve seen

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you’re trying to choose a fall protection training provider, let me tell you something from experience: not all training is created equal. Some classes will actually teach you how to stay alive on a roof, beam, or lift… and some will just hand you a certificate and hope you don’t ask questions. I’ve taken

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you work at heights in Delaware—whether you’re roofing in Wilmington, climbing ladders in Dover, or unloading at the Port of Wilmington—you’ve probably heard the same reminder over and over: “Make sure you’re tied off.” And honestly? There’s a good reason for that. Falls continue to be the No. 1 killer in construction, nationwide and

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you work in Connecticut—construction, maintenance, warehousing, utilities, telecom, or even a small roofing crew—you’ve probably heard someone say, “Yeah, we know the OSHA rules.” But then you look around and notice: Let me tell you something as someone who’s been on Connecticut sites for a long time: fall hazards don’t care if the job

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you’re working in Colorado—whether you’re climbing roofs in Denver, doing HVAC on a snowy rooftop in Colorado Springs, or framing a house in Fort Collins—here’s one truth you can’t ignore: Falls don’t care how experienced you are. New guys fall. Old guys fall. People who “know what they’re doing” fall.And in this state, where

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you’re looking for Fall Protection Training in California, let me tell you something upfront:California is not like the other 49 states when it comes to safety rules. And if you’ve worked here long enough—whether you’re a roofer in Fresno, an ironworker in LA, a carpenter in San Jose, or a solar installer in Bakersfield—you

Mike
December 1, 2025

If you’re a carpenter heading into your very first fall protection class, let me tell you something upfront: you’re doing the right thing. Not because OSHA says so (even though they do), but because working at heights is one of those things where confidence can fool you and gravity never misses. I’ve seen brand-new apprentices

Mike
November 28, 2025