OSHA in Education
Anyone working in the education industry? What are the top 10 EHS issues you experience?

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In Wisconsin, we have two public (state supported) higher education systems. We have the UW system, with the biggest being The University of Wisconsin - Madison. In the Big Ten it is just called "Wisconsin (Badgers)," (I am personally a Michigan State Spartan). Then thee are UW schools in Milwaukee (the biggest after Madison), Green Bay, Oshkosh, Lacrosse, ....... now with satellite campuses spread through out the state. All these have the traditional 4-year and post graduate college degrees.
Then there is another system, the "Technical College System" They stress training and education in the trades and the like. In principal you go to a Tech school to be a plumber or tool & die maker and UW to be a teacher or engineer. There is some cross over between the two systems and transferring between the two is getting easier all the time. In my home state (of Michigan) they combine the Tech schools with 2-year college systems and call them "Junior Colleges."
I dabble a bit with safety education and training in my TC District as a contractor. Typically in technical and specialized training a site manager (EHS or HR) may not have the time or the expertise. Most of my customers come from small to medium sized manufacturers, as the big boys have "trainers" in many cases. I do:
OSHA Outreach (primarily)
PIT (train-the-trainer)
Lockout & Machine Guarding (train-the-trainer)
The TC offers (but I do not teach)
Permit Required Confined Space (Attendant, Supervisor, and Rescue)
HAZWOPPER
Haz Materials
First Aid, AED, & CPR
These are NOT college credit courses but considered "certificate seminars".
Some trades training require some formal safety training. I know in the electrical programs they are required to take First Aid, CPR, and AED. In tool & die they get some lockout and machine guarding built in the course.
At my TC little formal training is done for construction. Did offer Outreach but instructors are hard to find. I am sure some is built into the trades.

When I was a firefighter, we used to do school fire safety inspections. Here are some of the findings.
The fire code only allows 25% of the wall space to be covered with flammable decorations. Especially in elementary schools, teachers would want to cover most of the wall space with student art and posters. They were also upset when we told them they had to clear the wall.
Especially in older school buildings. there are never enough electrical outlets. The use of extension cords was rampant. Again teachers would get upset when we unplugged everything and reminded them that extension cords are for temporary use only.
High school chemistry labs are one of the scariest places in a school. We found potassium cyanide stored below hydrochloric acid. If you don't know this is how the gas chamber works. We found old bottles of ethyl ether that had crystalized in to diethyl peroxide. These crystals are shock sensitive. We had to evacuate the school and call the bomb squad for disposal.
We also found the janitor's closets can contain just about any chemical in the world.