Many types of businesses expose employees to damaging levels of noise pollution while they are at work. Surprisingly, many of the noises that cause hearing loss are not the loud uncomfortable ones that most people think of. Instead, they fall into the category of mid-level decibels and continue for long periods of time. As a result, hearing loss often occurs gradually, without workers even realizing it until it is too late. However, there are many precautions that employers can take to protect employees and reduce the level of hearing damage that occurs in the workplace.
- Noises are loud enough to be disruptive, such as busy street traffic or a vacuum cleaner, and last for most of the workday.
- Employees must elevate their voices in order to heard, even when standing close to each other.
- Employees use power tools or machinery for more than 30 minutes a day
- Your business operates in one of the following industries: construction, demolition, road repair, woodworking, plastics processing, engineering, manufacturing, fabrication or foundries.
- Installing quieter equipment or switching to a process that doesn’t require the equipment
- Installing screens, barriers, enclosures and absorbent materials in the workplace to act as a sound dampener and reduce the level of noise that workers are exposed to
- Implementing policies that limit the amount of time that workers spend in noisy areas or using noisy equipment
- Issuing proper hearing protection to employees who work in noise-prone areas and training them on the proper usage