https://completemarkets.com/company/CompleteMarkets/Articles/content-package/IMMS-Library/TabCategory/article-post/1555/OSHA-HANDBOOK-FOR-SMALL-BUSINESSES-PART-2/
... small business owner or manager through your insurance carrier, the local safety council, and many local, state, and federal agencies, including the state consultation programs and local OSHA offices. Additional checklists are available from the National Safety Council, trade associations, insurance companies, and other similar service organizations. SELF-INSPECTION SCOPE The scope of your self-inspections should include the following: PROCESSING, RECEIVING, SHIPPING AND STORAGE: Equipment, job planning, layout, heights floor loads, projection of materials, and materials-handling and storage methods. BUILDING AND GROUNDS CONDITIONS: floors, walls, ceilings, exits, stairs, walkways, ramps, platforms, driveways, and aisles. HOUSEKEEPING PROGRAM: waste disposal tools, objects, material, leakage and spillage, cleaning methods, schedules, work areas, remote areas, ... storage areas. ELECTRICITY: equipment, switches, breakers, fuses, switch-boxes, junctions, special fixtures, circuits, insulation, extensions, tools, motors, grounding, and NEC compliance. LIGHTING: type, intensity, controls, conditions, diffusion, location, glare, and shadow control. HEATING AND VENTILATION: type, effectiveness, temperature, humidity, controls, and natural and artificial ventilation and exhausting. MACHINERY: points of operation, flywheels, gears, shafts, pulleys, key ways, belts, couplings, sprockets, chains, frames, controls, lighting for tools and equipment, brakes, exhausting, feeding, oiling, adjusting, maintenance, lock out, grounding, work space, location, and purchasing standards. PERSONNEL: training, experience, methods of checking machines before ...