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Logging Logging
Hazard Recognition

Logging operations involve felling, moving trees and logs from the stump to the point of delivery, transporting machines, equipment and personnel to and from and between logging sites. Loggers need to recognize the hazards associated with marking danger trees, felling, limbing, bucking, debarking, chipping, yarding, loading, unloading, and storing logs. This page addresses safety practices for all types of logging, regardless of the end use of the wood. These include pulpwood and timber harvesting and the logging of sawlogs, veneer bolts, poles, pilings and other forest products.
  • Potential Hazards of Mislabeled Steel Toe Logger Boots. OSHA Safety and Health Information Bulletin (SHIB) 09-30-2004, (2004, September 30). Alerts employers and employees of the potential electrical hazards of Georgia Boot’s mislabeled steel toe logger boots; to provide Georgia Boot customers with the manufacturer’s recall instructions for the subject boots; and to remind users of OSHA’s requirements for electrical protective equipment as covered by 29 CFR 1910.137.
  • Logging Review Report. OSHA, (2000, October). Provides a review of logging fatalities investigated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration in FY 1996 and FY 1997. 
  • Logging Safety. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Safety and Health Topic. Contains a listing of several NIOSH publications related to safety in the logging industry.
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Page last updated: 03/26/2008