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Safety Stripes by Mighty Line Floor Tape - The Best Workplace Safety podcast talking NFPA, EHS & Warehouse Safety Tips!

Safety Stripes by Mighty Line Floor Tape - The Best Workplace Safety podcast talking NFPA, EHS & Warehouse Safety Tips!

Hosted by Wes Wyatt, Mighty Line Floor Tape

Episodes

350

Latest episode

Jun 2026

Language

EN

About the show

Safety Stripes by Mighty Line is a podcast series produced by Dave Tabar and Wes Wyatt. The show and schedule will be Mighty Line Monday Minute presented by Dave Tabar, and Wednesday Warehouse Safety Tips by Wes Wyatt. Podcasts will be weekly and highlight general industrial and workplace safety topics. View the blogs, videos and articles at https://mightylinetape.com/ Vodcasts, and videos. Also all Mighty Line Minute podcasts at https://www.mightylineminute.com/ https://vimeo.com/mightylinefloortape Get Free Samples of Mighty Line Floor Tape Learn about Mighty Line Floor Tape and Mighty Line Floor Signage View all our podcasts at https://mightylinetape.com/pages/safetytips Operations are critical to every industry. It is essential that all employers maintain safe workplaces, and that all employees and visitors engage in behaviors that assure that all will return home safely. The Safety Stripes podcast will discuss important warehouse, industrial and commercial safety topics that management, safety managers and others with safety responsibilities can use to be more effective in protecting both employees and their operations. Wednesday Warehouse Safety Tips will do just that – provide everyday operational tips, tools and strategies that enable employees, supervisors, and managers to put safety into action in order to reduce workplace risk. Our goal is to improve health, safety and operational excellence at all worksites. Safety Stripes Podcast topics include or may include General Workplace Safety Safety Training Programs Hazard Identification Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA Compliance Guidelines Six Sigma - 5s Methodology OSHA Inspection Tips NFPA (National Fire Protection Association) Fire Safety Standards NFPA Codes and Standards EHS (Environment, Health, and Safety) Environmental Compliance Workplace Health Programs Safety and Health Management Systems Forklift Safety Forklift Operation Training Forklift Maintenance and Inspection Forklift Accident Prevention Racking Systems Warehouse Racking Solutions Pallet Rack Safety Standards Racking Inspection and Maintenance You can learn more about our warehouse safety tips and watch videos and read articles This podcast is provided by Mighty Line floor tape and Mighty Line floor signs - learn more at www.MightyLineTape.com

Listen to episodes

60 recent
June 10, 2026Episode 3295 min

S6 Ep329: Forklift Safety Essentials | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 329

https://jo.my/b1iz6sForklift Safety EssentialsYou don’t get a second chance with a forklift incident. These machines move fast, lift heavy, and punish mistakes. Every close call has a story behind it. Most of them start small. A skipped inspection. A loose load. A seatbelt is left hanging.Strong habits in your facility protect people long before danger shows up. The goal is simple. Go home the same way you came in. No shortcuts. No excuses.Here are a few tips to assist you with Forklift & Powered Industrial Truck (PIT) Safety: Start every shift with a real inspection. Check tires, forks, hydraulics, horn, brakes, and lights. Look for leaks or cracks. If something feels off, it probably is. Tag it and report it. Paperwork matters because it tracks patterns and prevents repeat issues. Understand the stability triangle. Picture a triangle under your truck. The center of gravity must stay inside it. Raise the load or turn too fast, and that center shifts. Tip-over risk spikes. Keep loads low. Move slowly on turns. Respect the physics. Watch your load position. Tilt back when carrying. Keep forks low when traveling. High loads block your view and raise your center of gravity. That’s how trucks roll. Simple adjustments make a big difference. Seatbelt on. Every time. No exceptions. Tip-overs happen in seconds. The belt keeps you inside the protective zone. Jumping feels natural in panic. It’s the worst move you can make. Stay seated. Stay alive. Control your speed and space. Wet floors, tight aisles, blind corners. They all change how your truck handles. Use your horn. Make eye contact. If you’re unsure, stop. Reset. Then move. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Safety isn’t built during an incident. It’s built in the quiet moments before one. The checklist you complete. The turn you take is slower. The belt you click without thinking. Those choices stack up.People are counting on you. Your crew. Your family. Make the safe move, the normal move. Every shift. Every load.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #ForkliftSafety #PITSafety #PreShiftInspection #MaterialHandling

June 3, 2026Episode 3285 min

S6 Ep328: Exit Routes, Drills, and Emergency Lighting | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 328

https://jo.my/jld2xuExit Routes, Drills, and Emergency LightingEmergencies don’t send calendar invites.A fire won’t wait until everyone remembers the exit route. A severe storm won’t pause while someone checks the location of the assembly point. Power can drop. Alarms can sound. People can panic. Fast. Dangerous. Preventable.That’s why emergency preparedness matters during National Safety Month. It’s not about checking a box. It’s about making sure every person in the facility knows where to go, what to do, and how to help others move safely when seconds matter.A strong Safety Culture doesn’t wait for an emergency to expose weak spots. It finds them early. It trains them. It fixes them before they cause someone to get hurt.Here are a few tips to assist you with National Safety Month, Week 1, Emergency Preparedness: Review exit routes before they’re needed. Walk the facility and confirm that exit paths are clear, marked, and easy to follow. Don’t assume everyone knows the way out. New employees, visitors, contractors, and temporary workers may need extra direction. Confirm assembly point locations. Make sure each crew member knows where to report after leaving the facility. The assembly point should be far enough from danger, easy to find, and clear of traffic or emergency response areas. Run “No-Notice” fire and weather drills. Planned drills help, but surprise drills show what people really know. Watch how the crew responds. Look for confusion, blocked paths, missed headcounts, and slow reactions. Check emergency lighting. If the power goes out, emergency lights become the guide rope. Test them on a regular schedule. Replace weak batteries, damaged units, and lights that don’t cover key walkways, stairs, exits, or work areas. Use every drill as a teaching moment. Don’t shame people for mistakes. Fix the gaps. Talk through what happened. Update procedures when needed. A drill that reveals a problem is doing its job. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Emergency preparedness works best before the smoke, sirens, wind, or darkness shows up. That’s the whole point. You train on a normal day, so people can react on the worst day.This week, look at your facility with fresh eyes. Find the blocked exit. Check the weak light. Ask the employee who looks unsure. Then fix what needs fixing. Safety isn’t paperwork. It’s people going home because someone cared enough to prepare.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!

May 27, 2026Episode 3275 min

S6 Ep327: Static Control, Grounding, and Dust Prevention in Dry Facilities | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 327

https://jo.my/uymenbStatic Control, Grounding, and Dust Prevention in Dry FacilitiesStatic can seem harmless. A little snap from a handrail. A shirt clinging to your sleeve. A spark you barely notice. But in a dry warehouse facility, static can build up quickly on conveyor belts, rollers, sorters, plastic totes, and moving product.That spark has a job. It wants to jump. If it comes into contact with dust, vapors, or flammable liquids, the result can be serious. Fast. Dangerous. Preventable.A strong Safety Culture pays attention to the small signs before they become big events. Static control and grounding aren’t paperwork items. They’re daily habits that protect people, property, and production.Here are a few tips to assist you with Static & Grounding in Dry Warehouses: Watch conveyor and sorting systems for static trouble. Dry air, fast belts, plastic parts, and constant friction can create static buildup. Report repeated shocks, snapping sounds, product sticking, or odd dust attraction. Those are warning signs. Keep grounding and bonding points clean and secure. A loose clamp or dirty contact can break the path to ground. Ensure approved grounding points are used in areas where flammable liquids are present. Never remove or bypass grounding connections to “save time.” Control flammable liquid storage areas. Keep containers closed when they’re not in use. Store them only in approved areas. Make sure bonding and grounding steps are followed during transfer, pouring, or dispensing. One spark can be enough. Manage dust near electrical panels. Dust can block airflow, hold heat, and increase fire risk. Keep panel areas clean, dry, and clear. Don’t stack products, tools, or trash in front of electrical cabinets. Access matters during both normal work and emergencies. Report dry air and repeat static issues early. If workers get shocked often, don’t shrug it off. Tell supervision so the facility can review humidity, equipment condition, grounding, and cleaning practices. Small reports prevent big losses. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.The best facilities don’t wait for smoke, sparks, or shutdowns before they act. They train people to notice the little things. They fix clamps. They clean dust. They ask questions before a shortcut becomes a fire.Static control is really about discipline. Grounding is really about trust. Dust control is really about respect for the energy around us every day. You may not see electricity working, but you better believe it’s there.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #ElectricalSafety #EnergyControl #StaticControl #GroundingSafety #FacilitySafety #DustPrevention

May 20, 2026Episode 3265 min

S6 Ep326: Cord and Power Tool Management | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 326

https://jo.my/icpypwCord and Power Tool ManagementA bad cord doesn’t look like much at first. A little nick in the jacket. A missing ground pin. A power strip tucked behind a desk with too many plugs in it. Small stuff, right? Not really.Electrical problems can turn fast. A damaged extension cord can shock a worker. A weak connection can heat up. A power tool with a bad cord can fail in someone’s hands. Fast. Dangerous. Preventable.A strong Safety Culture pays attention to the small things before they become big things. That’s the real work. We don’t wait for smoke, sparks, or for someone to get hurt. We build habits that catch hazards early, fix them quickly, and keep the facility moving safely.Here are a few tips to assist you with Cord & Power Tool Management: Inspect cords before use. Look for cuts, frays, exposed wires, loose plugs, cracked insulation, or missing ground pins. Don’t tape up a bad cord and call it good. Remove it from service and report it. Check power tools before plugging them in. Look at the cord, plug, trigger, guards, and housing. If something feels loose, smells hot, or sparks, stop using it. A tool should help the job, not add risk. Avoid daisy-chaining power strips. Plugging one power strip into another can overload the circuit and create heat. Offices, break rooms, and workstations need clean power setups. One strip into the wall. That’s it. Use the right cord for the job. Match the cord to the load, the distance, and the work area. Outdoor or dock-adjacent areas may need cords rated for tougher conditions. Don’t run cords through puddles, doorways, or pinch points. Test GFCI outlets in damp areas. Dock doors, wash areas, battery charging spots, and damp corners need extra attention. Test the outlet using the test and reset buttons. If it won’t trip or reset, report it right away. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Electrical safety works best when everyone owns it. Don’t walk past a damaged cord. Don’t ignore a buzzing outlet. Don’t assume someone else will catch it.The safest facilities build simple habits and repeat them every day. Inspect. Report. Remove. Replace. That pattern saves time, protects people, and prevents work from stopping due to a preventable incident.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #ElectricalSafety #PowerToolSafety #ExtensionCordSafety #GFCI

May 13, 2026Episode 3255 min

S6 Ep325: Battery Charging Station Safety | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 325

https://jo.my/0tifisBattery Charging Station SafetyA battery charging station can look quiet. A charger hums. A pallet jack sits parked. A forklift waits for the next shift. But behind that quiet setup, real hazards can build fast. Hydrogen gas. Acid splash. Damaged connectors. Blocked eyewash stations. Small misses can turn into big injuries.Good safety culture means we don’t wait for smoke, sparks, or a burn to start caring. We build habits before the trouble shows up. That’s how a facility protects its people, its equipment, and its production schedule.Here are a few tips to assist you with Battery Charging Station Safety: Keep ventilation working and clear. Lead-acid batteries can release hydrogen gas during charging. That gas can collect near ceilings or tight corners. Make sure the charging area has proper airflow, that vents are not blocked, and that fans or exhaust systems operate as required by your facility’s safety guidelines. Control ignition sources. No smoking, open flames, grinding, or sparking tools near charging stations. Hydrogen gas can ignite quickly. Fast. Dangerous. Preventable. Keep signs visible and keep the area free from anything that could start a fire. Wear the right PPE every time. Battery acid can burn skin and eyes. Use the required face shield, safety goggles, acid-resistant gloves, apron, and proper footwear when handling batteries, acid, or connectors. Don’t rush this step. PPE only works if you wear it before the splash. Inspect connectors and cables before use. Look for cracked insulation, loose plugs, frayed wires, corrosion, or signs of overheating. A damaged connector is more than an equipment issue. It can shock, burn, or start a fire. Report problems right away and remove damaged equipment from service. Keep eyewash stations ready. An eyewash station must be easy to reach and use, and free from boxes, pallets, trash, or parked equipment. Check the flow, cleanliness, and access as required by your facility. In an acid splash, seconds matter. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.A safe battery-charging area doesn’t happen by chance. It happens because people respect the hazard, follow the process, and speak up when something looks wrong. That’s the kind of culture that keeps crews whole and facilities moving.So take the extra minute. Check the airflow. Put on the PPE. Clear the eyewash path. These are simple actions, but they carry serious weight. The best safety wins are the ones nobody sees because the injury never happened.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #PPE BatteryChargingSafety #ElectricalSafety #EyewashStation

May 6, 2026Episode 3245 min

S6 Ep324: Lockout/Tagout Basics | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 324

https://jo.my/uiss9eLockout/Tagout BasicsElectrical energy and stored machine energy don’t care how long you’ve worked around them. They don’t care if the repair will “just take a second.” They can hurt you fast!Lockout/Tagout, or LOTO, gives us a clear way to stop that energy before work begins. It protects the person doing the job, the person walking nearby, and the person coming in on the next shift. A good LOTO is more than a lock on a switch. It’s a habit. A promise. A line nobody crosses.Here are a few tips to assist you with Lockout/Tagout Basics: Know the difference between normal operations and service. Clearing a small jam during regular operation may follow one procedure. Repairing, cleaning, adjusting, or replacing parts often requires full energy control. Don’t guess. Check your facility procedure before you place your hands near danger. Shut down the machine properly. Use the normal stop controls first. Then isolate the energy source. This may include electrical power, air pressure, hydraulic pressure, gravity, heat, springs, or moving parts that can shift. Machines can retain energy even after power is off. Respect that. Apply your own lock and tag. Your lock protects you. Your tag tells others who is working and why. Never remove another person’s lock unless your facility has a written process for that situation. No shortcuts. No favors. No, “I thought they were done.” Verify zero energy before the work starts. Try the start button after isolation, per your facility's procedure. Check that stored energy has been released or blocked. A machine that looks dead may still be ready to move. That’s the trap. Manage keys and locks across shifts with care. Multi-shift maintenance needs clear handoff steps. The outgoing worker should speak with the incoming worker when possible. Supervisors should track lock and job status, as well as key control. Confusion creates risk. Clean communication prevents it. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.LOTO works because it slows us down before the danger speeds up. It forces us to stop, think, check, and confirm. That pause can be the difference between a normal workday and a life-changing injury.Build the habit every time. Protect your crew. Protect yourself. The lock matters, but the mindset behind it matters even more.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #LockoutTagout #LOTO #ElectricalSafety

April 29, 2026Episode 3235 min

S6 Ep323: High-Traffic Zone Awareness and Blind Spot Prevention | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 323

https://jo.my/zho0scHigh-Traffic Zone Awareness and Blind Spot PreventionMaking sure people and equipment can move through the facility without surprises is part of a solid safety culture. Most serious warehouse incidents don’t start with someone trying to get hurt. They start with a missed glance, a blocked view, a rushed turn, or a driver who assumes the aisle is clear.High-traffic zones can turn dangerous fast. Aisle ends, dock areas, staging lanes, intersections, and pedestrian walkways all carry risk. Add blind spots, reversing equipment, and distracted workers, and you’ve got a situation that can go bad in seconds. Fast. Dangerous. Preventable.Here are a few tips to assist you with High-Traffic Zone Awareness: Treat every aisle end like an intersection. Slow down before you exit a racking aisle. Stop if needed. Look both ways. Make eye contact with pedestrians and equipment operators. Never assume the other person sees you. Use convex safety mirrors correctly. Install mirrors where racking, walls, doors, or stacked product block the view. Keep them clean, aimed correctly, and free from damage. A mirror that’s dusty, cracked, or pointed wrong gives a false sense of safety. Respect blue-light safety systems. Blue lights on forklifts and other powered equipment warn people that a machine is backing up or approaching. Don’t ignore them. Don’t walk through the warning zone. Operators should report dim, broken, or misaligned lights right away. Speak up when you see a hazard. “See Something, Say Something” only works if people trust the process. Report blocked mirrors, blind corners, missing floor markings, speeding, poor lighting, or near misses. Small reports prevent big injuries. Stay focused on the Fatal Five. Watch for struck-by hazards, caught-between hazards, slips and trips, falls, and improper material handling. These risks show up every day in busy facilities. Mental focus matters. A tired or distracted mind can miss a moving machine, a wet floor, or a nearby load shifting. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Safety Culture grows through daily habits. It’s the pause before stepping into an aisle. It’s the driver who slows down near a blind spot. It’s the worker who reports a cracked mirror before someone gets hurt. Those actions may seem small, but they build trust across the facility.National Work Zone Awareness Week and World Day for Safety and Health at Work remind us of something simple. Work zones exist inside facilities, too. Every aisle, dock, and crossing point deserves attention. We protect each other by staying alert, speaking up, and refusing to walk past hazards.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #PedestrianSafety #DistractionFree #HighTrafficZones #BlindSpotSafety #ForkliftSafety #SeeSomethingSaySomething

April 22, 2026Episode 3224 min

S6 Ep322: Mastering Pedestrian Right-of-Way | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 322

https://jo.my/4db87oMastering Pedestrian Right-of-WayOne of the top priorities of a solid Safety Culture is keeping everyone in the facility whole. We talk about heavy machines every day. But what about the person on foot? Walking on the floor is often more dangerous than driving. You have people, heavy equipment, and moving loads in the same space. It is a recipe for disaster if we do not have clear rules. Right-of-way is about mutual respect. It is about clear communication. It keeps the flow moving and keeps people from getting hurt. Everyone plays a role here. It is about awareness.Here are a few tips to assist you with Pedestrian Right-of-Way Protocols:Standardize your hand signals. This is critical. If a forklift operator sees you, they should signal their path clearly. If you are walking, make eye contact before crossing their path. Use simple hand waves to confirm you see each other. It is fast. It is safe. It stops the guessing games. If you are not sure, do not move. Wait for the signal.Use floor tape and physical barriers. These tools guide your movement. Tape is a visual reminder. Barriers are physical walls to keep folks safe. Make sure your lines are bright and clear. If a walkway is marked, stay in it. If a barrier is up, respect it. Never walk over or under a barrier.Wear your Hi-Viz apparel. If you are on the floor, you need to be seen. A bright shirt makes you stand out against the warehouse's dark colors. Do not let your gear get covered by a hoodie or coat. Bright colors save lives.Watch for blind spots. Forklifts have massive blind spots. Never assume a driver sees you. Stay back. Wait for a signal. If you cannot see the driver’s eyes, they cannot see you. Stop. Look. Listen. Be predictable.As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Safety is a habit. It is not something you turn on or off at the door. When you walk through the warehouse, stay alert. Scan your surroundings. Check for traffic. Small steps like making eye contact or wearing your vest save lives. Think before you step. We are all here to get the work done and go home to our families in one piece. Protect yourself. Protect your coworkers. That is how we keep the culture strong. It is about being a professional every single day.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #PedestrianSafety #DistractionFree #ZeroHarm #ForkliftSafety

April 15, 2026Episode 3214 min

S6 Ep321: Managing Mobile Device Hazards and Distractions | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 321

https://jo.my/2xfmzrManaging Mobile Device Hazards and DistractionsOver the last several decades, I’ve seen many things change in this industry. Some things get easier with new tech. Others get a lot more dangerous. One of the top priorities of a solid Safety Culture is making certain that every person who walks into the facility walks out the same way. We don't just follow rules for the sake of a clipboard. We do it because a forklift doesn't have a "delete" button. When you’re looking at a screen, you aren't looking at the three-ton machine headed your way.Distraction is a silent killer in our facilities. It only takes a second. One text. One song change. Suddenly, a routine walk across the floor becomes a tragedy. We have to treat our focus like PPE. If your mind isn't on the job, you aren't protected.Here are a few tips to assist you with mobile device and tech hazards: Keep headphones and earbuds out of your ears completely while on the floor. You need your hearing to detect backup alarms and approaching traffic. Put your phone away before you step into a work zone. Texting while walking is just as dangerous as texting while driving. Only check your devices in designated "Safe Zones." These are the only areas where you can take your eyes off the environment. Stop walking if you must take a call. Stand in a protected area with your back to a wall or rack. Remember that electronic distractions slow your reaction time by half. Every millisecond counts when a heavy load is moving nearby. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Focus isn't something you can flip on and off like a light switch. It's a habit. When you choose to put the phone away, you're looking out for yourself and the person working next to you. That's what a real pro does. We watch each other's backs so everyone makes it home for dinner.Keep your eyes up and your ears open. The floor is a live environment. It moves fast. You need to be faster. Respect the equipment and respect the "Safe Zones." That's how we keep this facility running right.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #PedestrianSafety #DistractionFree

April 8, 2026Episode 3205 min

S6 Ep320: Avoiding Floor Blindness and Equipment Accidents | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 320

https://jo.my/wdfmdhAvoiding Floor Blindness and Equipment AccidentsRoutine is a silent killer in any industrial facility. You walk the same paths every single day. You see the same racks and the same equipment. Eventually, your brain starts to tune out the small details. You stop seeing the forklift at the end of the aisle. You ignore the backup alarm. This is floor blindness. It’s a trick your mind plays on you. One of the top priorities of a solid Safety Culture is breaking that cycle to keep everyone whole.Staying alert isn’t just about following a handbook. It’s about looking out for your friends and making sure you get home for dinner. When we get too comfortable, we get distracted. We stop paying attention to the space around us. High-volume zones change fast. A pallet might be in a new spot. A driver might be new on the job. You have to stay sharp to stay alive.Here are a few tips to assist you with Distraction Management & Pedestrian Safety (Identifying "Floor Blindness"): Break the Routine. Look at your work area with fresh eyes every hour. Look for new hazards or changes in the workflow. Don't let the scenery disappear. Use the 3-Foot Rule. Always keep at least three feet of clearance between you and any moving forklift. This gives the operator room to correct a mistake. It gives you a buffer. Space equals safety. Ditch the Distractions. Keep your phone in your locker or your pocket. Never look at a screen while walking through the facility. One second of looking down can lead to a lifetime of regret. Make Eye Contact. Never assume a driver sees you. Wait until you make eye contact with the operator before moving near their path. Give a wave. Wait for a nod. Listen for Alarms. Keep your ears open. Do not wear earbuds or headphones on the floor. You need to hear the horns and the sirens to know what is coming around the corner. As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.Safety is a mindset that you carry every minute of the shift. It doesn't matter how many years you have on the clock. The floor doesn't care about your experience if you aren't paying attention. We want a culture where everyone watches each other's backs. If you see someone drifting into a danger zone, speak up. A quick shout can save a life.Think about why you work hard. It’s for your family and your future. Don't let a moment of "floor blindness" take that away. Stay present. Stay focused. Treat every walk across the floor like it’s your first time in the facility. That level of awareness is what separates a pro from a statistic.Thank you for being part of another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips. Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!#Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #SafetyTips #StayAlert #SafetyAwareness #WarehouseSafety #PedestrianSafety #FloorBlindness

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