• Free Webinar - OSHA Heat Illness Prevention 2026: What HR, EHS and Employers Should Do Now
  • Free Webinar - OSHA Heat Illness Prevention 2026: What HR, EHS and Employers Should Do Now

    • Speaker : Amorit Education
    • Session Code : AEMAY2026
    • Date : May 2026
    • Time : N/A
    • Duration : 30 mins

         Scroll to the bottom to watch the entire 30 mins explainer


Overview

 

Heat illness prevention has become a more urgent workplace safety and compliance issue for employers in 2026. OSHA’s updated Heat National Emphasis Program is already active, and employers should be prepared to address both outdoor and indoor heat hazards across worksites, warehouses, manufacturing floors, kitchens, laundries, distribution centers, agriculture, construction, and other high-risk environments.

 

This free HR and EHS compliance webinar explains what employers should review now, without overstating the status of the pending federal heat rule. The final federal Heat Injury and Illness Prevention Standard is still in rulemaking, but OSHA can already inspect heat hazards, ask questions, and evaluate whether employers have identified risks, trained workers, implemented feasible controls, and maintained records.

 

The session focuses on practical readiness: written heat illness prevention plans, indoor and outdoor risk areas, water/rest/shade, acclimatization, temporary worker safety, supervisor authority, emergency response, payroll coordination, anti-retaliation, and inspection-ready documentation.

 

Areas Covered:

 

  • OSHA’s updated Heat National Emphasis Program in 2026
  • Why employers should prepare now while the final federal heat rule remains pending
  • Difference between active heat enforcement and a final federal heat standard
  • Why heat illness prevention should involve HR, EHS, operations, staffing, payroll, and supervisors
  • Building a written, site-specific Heat Illness Prevention Plan
  • Indoor heat risks in warehouses, kitchens, laundries, factories, distribution centers, and maintenance areas
  • Outdoor heat risks in construction, agriculture, utilities, landscaping, roofing, paving, and field work
  • High-risk worker groups: new workers, returning workers, temporary workers, staffing agency workers, lone workers, and high-exertion roles
  • Water, rest, shade, cooling access, and hydration controls
  • Heat trigger planning using heat index, WBGT, or weather alerts
  • Acclimatization schedules for new and returning workers
  • Temporary worker training and staffing vendor coordination
  • Supervisor training on symptoms, breaks, rotation, stop-work authority, and escalation
  • Heat illness warning signs and buddy system monitoring
  • Emergency response planning, first aid, EMS escalation, site directions, and communication readiness
  • Scheduling, workload, production targets, and heat event planning
  • Payroll and timekeeping concerns when breaks, shifts, and schedules change
  • Documentation OSHA may expect during an inspection
  • Common employer mistakes and safer language for heat compliance communication

 

Why Should You Watch This Webinar?

 

Employers should not wait for the final federal heat rule before building a practical heat illness prevention system. OSHA’s heat enforcement focus is already active, and heat-related risks can create worker injuries, inspections, operational disruption, staffing problems, retaliation concerns, and documentation gaps.

 

This Webinar is especially useful because it explains heat safety from both the EHS and HR sides. Heat prevention is not just about water and shade. It also touches onboarding, staffing vendors, temporary worker training, acclimatization, supervisor behavior, leave routing, anti-retaliation, payroll, break tracking, emergency response, and recordkeeping.

 

The practical value is clear: employers can use this webinar to identify heat safety gaps before peak heat exposure creates an emergency. Viewers will understand how to build a site-specific plan, train supervisors, protect new and temporary workers, cover indoor and outdoor heat risks, and document the program as part of daily operations.

 

Who Will Benefit?

 

This webinar is designed for professionals responsible for workplace safety, HR compliance, employee training, operations, staffing, supervisor readiness, emergency response, and heat illness prevention. Those include:

 

  • HR Managers/HR Directors
  • HR Business Partners/HR Generalists
  • EHS Managers/Safety Managers
  • Compliance Officers/Operations Managers
  • Plant Managers/Warehouse Managers
  • Distribution Center Managers/Manufacturing Leaders
  • Construction Safety Teams/Agriculture Operations Teams
  • Retail Operations Managers/Hospitality Managers
  • Kitchen and Food Service Managers/Facilities Managers
  • Maintenance Managers/Frontline Supervisors
  • Crew Leaders/Staffing Coordinators
  • Recruiting Teams/Temporary Workforce Managers
  • Payroll Managers/Timekeeping Administrators
  • Training Managers/Risk Management Professionals
  • Workers’ Compensation Teams/Business Owners
  • Small and Mid-Sized Employer Leaders/Multi-Site Employer Compliance Teams


Watch the entire 30 mins explainer here:



This webinar is presented by Amorit Education’s in-house experts, who closely monitor regulatory, compliance, and workforce developments affecting employers and federal contractors. Their work is focused on turning complex updates into practical guidance that helps HR, compliance, and business teams understand what has changed, where the risks may sit, and what actions may deserve closer attention.

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Tags: OSHA, Heat Illness Prevention, Heat Stress, Workplace Safety, EHS, HR Compliance, OSHA Compliance, Safety Compliance, Worker Safety, Indoor Heat, Outdoor Work, Acclimatization, Temp Worker Safety, Supervisor Training, Emergency Response, Heat Safety, Construction Safety, Warehouse Safety, Manufacturing Safety, Agriculture Safety, Compliance Training, Risk Management, Amorit Education,