On August 27, 2020, New York City's (NYC) Council amended the administrative code of the
City of New York in relation to the definition of site safety training full compliance date. This amendment
2059-2020 goes into effect immediately and extends the compliance date to March 1, 2021.
New York City Buildings posted the following
notification.
In 2017, New York City's (NYC) Council amended the
administrative code of the City of New York and the NYC building code, in relation to construction site safety training. This amendment is called
Local Law 196 of 2017 (formerly known as Intro. 1447). It amends the administrative code by adding section 22-509 Construction site safety training courses. Requiring the Mayor to establish by March 1, 2018, a program to provide equal access to construction site safety training. This law has several deadlines and was established to make sure that construction workers in New York City all had a minimum amount of training. This law has been updated and delayed twice, so far (
click here for the FAQ on the regulation).
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Properly capped rebar |
The first deadline has passed already, beginning
March 1, 2018, each permit holder at a building site for which a construction superintendent, site safety manager, or site safety coordinator is required shall ensure that each construction or demolition worker employed or otherwise engaged at such site by the permit holder or performing subcontracted work for or on behalf of such permit holder shall have successfully completed:
- an Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) 10-hour class;
- an OSHA 30-hour class; or
- a 100-hour training program.
We are currently passed the second deadline of
December 1, 2019. Permit holders shall ensure each worker has an
OSHA 30-hour card, SST card, a limited SST card or a temporary SST card and each worker who is serving as a site safety manager, site safety coordinator, concrete safety manager, construction superintendent or a competent person at such site shall have an
SST supervisor card.
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Recent OSHA 30-hour Construction Safety Course |
If you are wondering what an
SST card, a limited SST card, a temporary SST card, or an SST supervisor card is, well you are not the only one! First, a
Site Safety Training card (SST card) SST card, a limited SST card, a temporary SST card, or an SST supervisor card are cards that are issued by a New York City Department of Buildings Approved Training Provider (which at the time of my writing this, there are
102 training providers approved).
To get a
limited SST card (which expires
August 31, 2020) you must have taken one of the following training paths:
- OSHA 10-hour class with 20-hours of additional training:
- OSHA 10-hour
- 8-hour Fall Prevention
- 8-hour Chapter 33 (Site Safety Manager Refresher) or 4-hour General Electives and 4-hour Specialized Electives
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User and refresher
- OSHA 30-hour class
- 100-Hour Training Program Approved by the Building Department
- Prior Experience
- 4-hour Fall Prevention
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User
To get a
temporary SST card (which expires after 6 months during which time training must be completed to receive a
Limited SST card or SST card) you must have taken an OSHA 10-hour class.
To get an
SST card (which expires after 5 years) you must have taken one of the following training paths, this card will be required by
September 1, 2020 (unless the NYC Council pushes this deadline back
):
- OSHA 10-hour class with 30-hours of additional training:
- OSHA 10-hour class
- 8-hour Fall Prevention
- 8-hour Chapter 33 (Site Safety Manager Refresher)
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User
- 4-hour General Electives
- 4-hour Specialized Electives
- 2-hour Drug and Alcohol Awareness
- OSHA 30-hour Class with 10-hours of additional training:
- OSHA 30-hour class
- 8-hour Fall Prevention
- 2-Hour Drug and Alcohol Awareness
- 100-hour Training Program Approved by the Building Department
- Prior Experience
- 4-hour Fall Prevention
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User
To get a
Supervisor SST card (which expires after 5 years) you must have taken:
- OSHA 30-hour class
- 8-hour fall prevention
- 8-hour Chapter 33 (Site Safety Manager Refresher)
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User
- 2-hour Site Safety Plan
- 2-hour Tool Box Talks
- 2-hour Pre-task Safety Meetings
- 2-hour General Electives
- 2-hour Specialized Electives
- 2-hour Drug and Alcohol Awareness
So that's how you get the various cards required under this local law. The law doesn't end there. The next compliance date is
September 1, 2020. By that date, all workers must have an
SST card to work on most construction projects.
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By the full compliance date, SST Cards & Supervisor SST cards will be required on most construction sites |
Since
SST Cards and
Supervisor SST cards expire after 5 years, applicants must have completed training to renew the cards in the one-year period preceding renewal of the card (in other words if the card expires in September 2025, in the year from September 2024 to September 2025 you need to complete the training discussed below):
- SST Card (8 Hours)
- 4-hour Fall Prevention
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User
- Supervisor SST card (16 hours)
- 8-hour Fall Prevention
- 4-hour Supported Scaffold User
- 2-hour Tool Box Talks
- 2-hour Pre-Task Safety Meetings
Local Law 196 of 2017 obviously, creates a minimum training requirement for workers on most construction projects, to visit the
NYC Site Safety Training website click here. Permit holders are required to maintain a daily log that identifies each worker and that includes, for each worker a copy of
SST card, a limited SST card, a temporary SST card, or an SST supervisor card or proof of taking an OSHA 10-hour; OSHA 30-hour; or 100-hour training program. Violations of this law will result in a civil penalty of up to
$5,000 per untrained worker to be issued to the owner of the site, the permit holder, and the employer of the untrained worker (this could mean up to a $15,000 fine, based on contract language, to the employer of the untrained worker). Failing to maintain the log will result in a civil penalty of
$2,500. The gradual phase-in, the list of General and Specialized Elective courses, and the recent release of what it will take to become an approved training provider all seem to imply that the later dates may be the actual dates of implementation. As we see now.
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