A Guide to Warehouse Safety Signage Requirements

Posted on January 22, 2024
Damotech - Rack Safety
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Safety signage plays a crucial role in safeguarding warehouse operations. The importance of displaying appropriate signs cannot be overstated, as they are instrumental in preventing accidents and preserving lives. This comprehensive guide explores the significance of safety signs in warehouses, covering OSHA guideline-approved health and safety signs, compliance signs, danger warnings, hazard warnings, and material handling signs.

Whether utilizing warehouse rack aisle signs, floor signs, or loading dock signs, the right signage is essential for establishing a well-organized and secure warehouse environment. By prioritizing proper signage, you ensure your warehouse's smooth and safe functioning, fostering a sense of confidence and tranquility in your operations. Explore the key insights into safety signs and their pivotal role in warehouse management.

Below, you’ll find a guide to recommended signs covering everything from organization and layout through health and safety, the requirements for OSHA signs, and much more.

 

Warehouse aisle and row signs

Warehouse aisle sign
Figure 1. Example of warehouse aisle sign fastened to a rack column.

It might seem obvious, but it’s easy to forget just how vital aisle and row signs are in providing your warehouse with a logical, highly organized layout. Aisle and row signage is imperative in creating an environment where employees and contract workers can find what they need quickly. Either suspended from the ceiling or attached to rack uprights, aisle, and row signs come in many shapes and sizes, but their shared characteristics are large lettering and concise communication. It’s also impossible to have too many of these signs: make sure you put them at any breakpoints that occur down each aisle in addition to the ends.

Think of how many minutes you’ve wasted while being lost in a grocery or department store, then multiply that by the number of employees working in your warehouse.

By organizing your workspace with a clearly labeled layout, you can increase both safety and productivity, thus streamlining workflow and, ultimately, maximizing profitability.

Forklift traffic signs

forklift traffic signs
Figure 2. Examples of forklift caution signs (courtesy of Vecteezy).

Weighing up to 9,000 pounds and able to travel up to 18 miles per hour, forklifts are heavy-duty machinery. There’s no denying the damage they can cause to racks, but they can also cause serious injury or even loss of life. According to an OSHA study, forklifts account for around 85 deaths a year, with injuries reaching up to 96,700 cases. Worse yet, OSHA estimates that about 70% of these accidents could be prevented with proper forklift safety measures in place.

While regular and thorough training for forklift operators is key, you can also establish a safe workplace culture by implementing strong, clear forklift signage. Forklift signs come in many shapes and sizes. In high-traffic areas, you can post signage that warns other workers about potential collisions and reminds forklift operators of safety protocols. You can also implement signage that designates dedicated forklift lanes, using vinyl floor tape or other markings on the ground to keep the lanes clear.

Traffic lights are also an option. These can include everything from light-up stop-and-start traffic signs (not unlike those you’d see in the street), flashing “collision awareness” signs, and floor indicators. The flashing lights command attention, adding another level of alertness to the warehouse.

Further, signs can be used to remind operators of key racking areas to be sure they are extra careful when moving in and out of rows and aisles. As we know, there are many ways that forklifts can damage racks. Even minor forklift impacts can accumulate over time, resulting in serious consequences. As such, it’s paramount to ensure that forklifts do not compromise rack integrity.

Utilizing forklift signage means increased safety for your workers and less damage to your racking and products. In other words, being as thorough as possible is worth the effort.

 

Warehouse health and safety signage

eyewash poster
Figure 3. A sign indicating an emergency eye-washing station.

In addition to forklift signs, numerous other signs will apply to warehouse safety for your workers. These could range from sanitary hand-washing reminders in the restroom to specific information unique to your work environment. For example, health and safety signs can supplement your staff’s training or point to hazardous materials, dangerous areas, and other potentially important safety protocols throughout the warehouse.

Of course, you may not feel comfortable designing your own posters, but there are plenty available online to meet even the most specific needs. Damotech has designed a free warehouse safety poster highlighting various rack guidelines based on ANSI/RMI, OSHA, FEM standards and regulations. It’s a helpful poster to hang in a common area or breakroom. In doing so, you encourage employees to maintain mindfulness about serious safety issues even when they’re not active on the floor.

 

Signage for rack load capacity

Ensuring that you have accurate, well-placed, and easy-to-read load capacity labels or placards on your racks is crucial. This helps make sure your warehouse workers do not overload the pallet racks. With the correct labels, the messaging about load capacity is clear.

Load capacity label
Figure 4. A label showing the maximum load capacity per pair of beams on a racking system.

You may have access to accurate load capacity ratings if you have the original Load Application and Rack Configuration drawings (LARCs) from your rack systems’ initial configuration. But you may have reconfigured your racks as your warehousing needs have evolved with time. As such, you may not have accurate, verified load capacity ratings. Any changes made to the configuration of a rack — even as simple as adjusting a beam’s height or removing it — must be reviewed by a rack professional working in that domain, who can make the calculations needed to determine the rack’s load capacity.

Our engineering services can provide you with the accurate load capacity of your racking and provide labels for displaying them on your storage racks. These labels will offer peace of mind for worker safety and the careful storage of your goods.

 

OSHA signage requirements

It’s worth noting that there are strict OSHA signing requirements for specific signs, meaning you won’t necessarily be able to use company colors for all your warehouse signage. OSHA’s full guidelines with key takeaways are available here. Signs identifying hazards must follow strict protocols regarding the sign and label colors, specific signal words, letter style, and size and placement within the warehouse.

There are three primary classifications for safety signs: DANGER, WARNING, and CAUTION.

OSHA requirements for signage
Figure 5. OSHA's three primary classifications for safety signs: DANGER, WARNING, and CAUTION.

Danger signs are used to indicate the most hazardous situations. If these situations are not avoided, they can result in serious injury or loss of life. The word “danger” must be printed in all capital white letters on a red background. The safety alert symbol precedes the word. These signs must be placed where a hazard poses an immediate danger. Common examples include signage required for high-pressure pipes, high voltage, heavy equipment, and machinery hazards.

Warning signs describe hazards that may result in serious injury or death, but the risk is not quite as severe as situations that require a “danger” sign. The word “warning” is printed in all-capital black letters on an orange background. The safety alert symbol precedes the word. These signs must be placed where the hazard poses an immediate danger. Common examples include signs indicating high forklift traffic and confined space.

Caution signs describe hazards that may result in minor or moderate injuries if the sign is ignored. The word “caution” is printed in all-capital black letters on a yellow background. The safety alert symbol precedes the word. The caution sign should be placed near the potential hazard. Common examples include signs for fall hazards and minor electrical shocks. This sign can also be used to promote general warehouse safety protocols.

In addition to knowing the specific types of signs, there are other requirements. For example, the signage materials must be blunt or rounded and should not include sharp edges or splinters.


Warehouse signs can save lives

From designating forklift lanes and safety protocols to maintaining organization and structure in the workplace, signs are a constant source of communication for workers. The benefits of thorough warehouse signage far outweigh the efforts required to implement them.

Whether you’re starting up a new warehouse from scratch or you’ve been working in the same space for years, it’s crucial to routinely audit your sign set-up and find ways to augment, streamline, and improve the visual communication in the warehouse. This will help improve the overall safety of your warehouse. More importantly, it will help protect your workers from injury or death. If you need a professional engineer specializing in this domain to calculate your rack load capacities and provide you with updated load capacity labels or plaques for your racking systems, click here for a personalized quote.

 
 
References:

OSHA (2013) 1910.145. Retrieved from https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1910/1910.145

DC Velocity (2021) The importance of warehouse signage. Retrieved from https://www.dcvelocity.com/blogs/2-one-off-sound-off/post/50945-the-importance-of-warehouse-signage

Go2Partners (2020) 5 Tips for Effective Warehouse and Production Signage. Retrieved from https://blog.go2partners.com/operations/5-tips-for-effective-warehouse-and-production-signage

Graphic Products. Five Ways to Meet OSHA Requirements for Safety Signage. Retrieved from https://www.graphicproducts.com/articles/five-ways-to-meet-osha-requirements-for-safety-signage/

Solus Group (2015) How Warehouse Signage Can Improve Efficiency. Retrieved from https://solusgrp.com/blog/how-warehouse-signage-can-improve-efficiency.html

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Welcome to the world of Damotech, the first and largest rack safety solutions specialist in North America. With its lines of rack protection and repair products, Damotech strives to put an end to the endless cycle of upright replacement by focusing on warehouse safety and the permanent elimination of recurring rack damage. Through our engineering services, we will help create a safer working environment for you and your employees, bringing you true peace of mind while saving you money in the process.

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