Bilingual Safety Training New Mexico

The ladder is wobbling beneath the drywaller. The carpenter is hacking away at a 2x4 without saw protection. The mason is straining to lift a huge stack of bricks. The fact that these workers are Spanish-speaking subcontractors doesn't mean you're off the hook if one gets hurt.

Local Companies

RCR Remodel
(505) 833-5295
6908 cisco rd nw
albuquerque, NM
RCR Remodel
(505) 833-5295
6908 cisco rd nw
albuquerque, NM
Wiseman's Home Improvements, LLC
(505) 801-0035
708 Sagebrush Drive
Aztec, NM
JUST THE DOORS
(505) 830-9813
2815 sundance kid s.w.
albuquerque, NM
Eagle Eye Contracting, LLC
(505) 298-4227
PO box 16030
Albuquerque, NM
Cottonwood Builders
575.644.6575
1700 Tucson Ave.
Las Cruces, NM
Cottonwood Builders
(575) 644-6575
1700 Tucson Ave.
Las Cruces, NM
There's No Place like Home LLC Design and remodeling
(505) 798-2513
4801 Lang Ave. NE
Albuquerque, NM
Top Notch Exteriors
(505) 523-5837
935 San Francisco St
Las Cruces, NM
David Ferry Construction Company
(505) 266-4663
Albuquerque, NM


The ladder is wobbling beneath the drywaller. The carpenter is hacking away at a 2x4 without saw protection. The mason is straining to lift a huge stack of bricks. The fact that these workers are Spanish-speaking subcontractors doesn't mean you're off the hook if one gets hurt. If it's your project, OSHA will ask about your safety training — for employees as well as for subs.

“Whoever is holding the purse has the most ability to enforce safety,” says Javier Arias, chairman of Hispanic Contractors Association de Tejas. Citing data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and others, Arias says that foreign-born Hispanic workers are at far greater risk of jobsite injuries and fatalities than U.S.-born workers, due mainly to lack of training and to cultural differences.

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Safety Days are held on Saturdays and are geared to children as well as their parents.

Several programs Arias has spearheaded in Texas could be models for safety training nationwide. Sponsored in part by Lowe's, these include one-day “Safety Fairs,” held in Dallas, Austin, and San Antonio, that have trained more than 2,000 Spanish-speaking construction workers since 2001. Attendees work in both commercial and residential construction, but plans are under way for training focused on residential safety. (Learn more at www.hcadetejas.org.)

For English-speaking remodelers hoping to raise safety awareness among Spanish-speaking crews, Arias says a key is to identify the leader. Hispanic workers tend to

Click here to read full article from Remodeling

Featured Local Company

RCR Remodel

5058335295
6908 cisco rd nw
albuquerque, NM

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