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Warehouse Safety Tips

Warehouse Safety Tips

Von: Wes Wyatt
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Warehouse Safety Tips by Mighty Line is a podcast series produced 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 of the podcasts can be viewed at https://vimeo.com/mightylinefloortape. Get Free Samples of Mighty Line Floor Tape (https://mightylinetape.com/pages/product-request-form) Learn about Mighty Line Floor Tape and Mighty Line Floor Signage (https://mightylinetape.com/pages/about-us-floor-tape) View all our podcasts at https://mightylinetape.com/pages/safetytips Safe 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 (https://mightylinetape.com/a/blog/category/mighty-lines-safety-talk-and-toolbox-talk-topics) This podcast is provided by Mighty Line floor tape (https://mightylinetape.com/collections/industrial-safety-floor-tape-solid) and Mighty Line floor signs (https://mightylinetape.com/collections/mighty-line-standard-floor-signs) - learn more at www.MightyLineTape.com (https://mightylinetape.com/)© 2019-2025 Warehouse Safety Tips Management & Leadership Marketing & Vertrieb Ökonomie
  • Building Hand Safety Awareness | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 314
    Feb 25 2026

    https://jo.my/m7nlmy

    Building Hand Safety Awareness

    Hand safety sounds simple until you see how fast it can go wrong. One quick reach into a rack. One loose glove near a moving part. One pinched finger between a pallet and a guard rail. Cuts, pinches, and caught-in hazards are some of the most common hand injury risks in a facility. They also tend to happen during “normal” work. That’s the tricky part.

    The goal this week is awareness you can feel. You should be able to spot a hand hazard the same way you spot a spill. Fast. Automatic. If you’ve ever finished a shift with sore knuckles or a small slice you ignored, that’s your warning sign. Small injuries are often the precursor.

    Here are a few tips to assist you with hand safety and reduce cuts, pinches, and caught-in hazards:

    Build quick hand safety talks into the start of shifts. Keep it short. Two minutes. Pick one task for the day and ask, “Where could hands get hurt here?” Then name the control. Guarding, tool use, spacing, or gloves.

    Get workers involved in hazard spotting. The people doing the job see the risks first. Ask for one caught-in hazard per area each week. Think conveyors, dock plates, pallet jacks, shrink wrap, and racking. Write it down. Fix it. Report back.

    Use real stories to make it real. Share a short incident or near-miss from your facility or industry. What was the task? Where were the hands? What should’ve happened instead? People remember stories more than rules.

    Make personal accountability non-negotiable. Keep hands out of pinch points. Use push sticks, hooks, or tools instead of fingers. If you can’t see your hands, stop. Reposition. Don’t “feel around” near moving parts.

    Recognize safe hand habits out loud. Call out the person who paused to lock out the equipment. Or the team that added a spacer on a load. Public recognition builds the kind of culture that sticks.

    As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.

    Keep your hands in the safe zone.

    Hand safety is a daily choice, not a poster on the wall. Look for tight gaps. Listen for movement. Feel the vibration in the equipment. Those are signals. Slow down before the risky moment, not after it.

    If you see a cut hazard, fix the edge or cover it. If you see a pinch point, create space or change the path. If you see a caught-in risk, stop the motion and control the energy. Simple thinking. Strong habits.

    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 #HandSafety #CaughtInHazards #PinchPointSafety #CutPrevention #NearMissReporting #PPE #SafetyAwareness

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    5 Min.
  • Tool and Machine Hazards | Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 313
    Feb 18 2026

    https://jo.my/pde2pq

    Tool and Machine Hazards

    Hand safety is one of those things people assume they’ve “got.” Until a quick job turns into a bandage, a pinch, or a scary near-miss with moving parts. Week 3 focuses on tool and machine hazards. Cuts, pinches, and caught-in hazards don’t always come from big mistakes. They come from small shortcuts. A dull blade. A missing guard. A jam you “just want to clear real quick.”

    Think about how often your hands are at risk. Box cutters. Strapping tools. Conveyor points. Pallet jacks. Dock plates. Even a simple drill can bite when it binds. Hands heal slowly, and grip strength matters at work and at home. So let’s keep your fingers where they belong. Attached. Working. Pain-free.

    Quick ways to prevent cuts, pinches, and caught-in injuries

    Here are a few tips to assist you with hand safety around tools and machines:

    Use the tool as intended.

    No screwdriver as a chisel. No knife as a pry bar. Tools slip when they’re doing the wrong job. That’s when the blade finds your hand instead of the box.

    Keep tools in good shape, or tag them out.

    Dull blades take more force. Loose handles twist. Worn grips slide. If it’s damaged, don’t “make it work.” Swap it out. Report it. Simple fix. Big payoff.

    Keep hands out of pinch points and moving parts.

    If it rolls, spins, pulls, or cycles, it can grab you. Use push sticks, clamps, or the right handling points. If you can see a gap closing, don’t test it with your fingers.

    Lockout/tagout before clearing a jam or servicing equipment.

    “Off” isn’t the same as “safe.” Stored energy, gravity, or an auto-start can bring a machine back to life. Take the extra minute. Control the energy. That’s not a suggestion. That’s a safety rule.

    Use guards and barriers every time. Don’t bypass them.

    Guards are there because someone would have been hurt without them. If a guard doesn’t fit right or slows down the job, call it out. Fix the root issue. Don’t remove the protection.

    As always, these are potential tips. Please follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.

    Make hand safety part of how the job feels.

    A solid safety culture means we notice the little things before they bite. You can often feel a hazard coming. The tool doesn’t sit right. The machine sounds off. The jam keeps happening. Listen to that.

    Take a quick pause before you reach in. Ask yourself, “If this moves right now, where does my hand go?” Build that habit, and it becomes automatic. If you see someone about to make a risky reach, speak up. A quick callout can save weeks of recovery.

    Thank you for joining another episode of Warehouse Safety Tips.

    Until we meet next time - have a great week, and STAY SAFE!

    #Safety #SafetyCulture #StaySafe #SafetyFirst #StayAlert #HandSafety #CaughtInHazards #PinchPointSafety #CutPrevention #ToolSafety #MachineGuarding #LockoutTagout #MaterialHandlingSafety #NearMissPrevention

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    5 Min.
  • Warehouse Safety Tips | Episode 312 | Glove Selection And Use
    Feb 11 2026

    https://jo.my/yduney

    Glove Selection And Use

    Why glove selection matters for hand safety

    Today’s focus is on selecting and using hand safety gloves. Cuts, pinches, and caught-in hazards show up fast in a busy facility. A torn carton edge. A sharp banding strap. A pallet shift that grabs your finger. It only takes one slip.

    Gloves help, but only when you choose the right pair and wear them correctly. The wrong glove can be a problem in its own right. Too loose and it snags. Too thin and it fails. Too bulky, and you lose grip. That’s when hands get hurt.

    Common glove mistakes that lead to injuries

    I’ve seen people grab the “closest pair” and call it good. That’s how you end up using light-duty gloves on a sharp task. Or wearing coated gloves while handling chemicals. Or keeping the same pair for weeks because “they still look fine.” Meanwhile, the fingertips are worn down, and the liner is ripped. You can’t see every weakness until it’s too late.

    Glove selection and use you can trust

    Here are a few tips to assist you with glove selection and use for hand safety:

    Match the glove to the hazard. Cut-resistant gloves for blades and sharp edges. Chemical-resistant gloves for liquids. Heat gloves for hot parts. If you’re unsure, ask. Guessing doesn’t protect you.

    Check gloves before every use. Look for holes, tears, thinning spots, and split seams. Flip them over. Check the fingertips. A glove with damage is a glove that won’t do its job.

    Replace gloves when they’re compromised. Don’t “stretch” glove life. If the grip coating is worn, the liner is frayed, or the glove has been soaked in a chemical, replace it. No debate.

    Take the gloves off safely. Peel them off so the dirty outside doesn’t come into contact with your skin. Keep used gloves out of break areas and off work surfaces. Contamination travels.

    Know when not to wear gloves. Some rotating tools and moving equipment can grab a glove and pull your hand in. That’s a caught-in hazard. Follow your facility rules for tasks where bare hands and guards are the safer choice.

    “As always, these are potential tips. Please be sure to follow the rules and regulations of your specific facility.”

    Build better habits around gloves and hand safety

    Hand safety glove selection isn’t a one-time choice. It’s a routine. Grab the right glove. Check it. Use it. Replace it. Simple. Consistent.

    And stay alert to the task change. If you switch from box handling to chemical wipe-down, your gloves should change too. Your hands tell the story of your work. Let’s keep that story injury-free.

    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 #HandSafety #GloveSelection #CutProtection #PinchPointSafety #PPE #MaterialHandlingSafety #FacilitySafety

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    5 Min.
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