Lift Truck Tips: Operator training drives more than safety

Whether a company accounts for every penny or hopes for the best, the value of an ongoing training program extends throughout an organization.

By·

Once you get your driver’s license, you are free to zip around the country on any road, in just about any vehicle you like. The only ongoing training involves concepts like the art of drinking coffee behind the wheel and some soul searching to avoid the perils of road rage. Forklift operators—whose jobs resemble a mix of the reliability of a commercial truck driver and the performance of a racecar driver—have a somewhat more rigorous training schedule. Hopefully.

“Students and trainees will say what they have to and do what you tell them to get through the initial training program. Where it falls down is after the fact,” saysRob Vetter, general manager ofIves Training. “Supervisors are often unaware of what is required to maintain proper operator habits and are therefore partially accountable for any incidents that might occur if those habits backslide— which they will if allowed to.”

Supervisors and mid-management are often left out of the training process, Vetter says. This is especially worrisome given their oversight plays such a crucial role in day-to-day safety. They don’t need to sit through the entire training program, but they must be exposed to some of the fundamental theories so they can spot right and wrong behaviors.

Unfortunately, bad habits can also be found at the management levels, where they tend to wait for incidents or other spikes in costs before pursuing a more disciplined or comprehensive training program. Vetter has experience as a forklift operator as well as a purchaser overseeing lift truck maintenance spends. When he noticed steep bills for items like sheared wheel lugs and bent rods, it was clearly a result of abuse and avoidable damage. Similarly, the company’s estimated 3% product damage during handling was closer to 30%.

“Certainly with larger companies that have identified training as a factor in increasing ROI, they are looking at lessening damage to product, equipment, personnel, insurance costs, etc.,” Vetter says. “The value proposition is there, but they sometimes do the right thing for the wrong (financial) reasons.” On the other hand, smaller companies that have not crunched the numbers tend to scoff at more involved training solutions, Vetter says. They do the minimum required, maybe buy an online course and hope any deviations from OSHA standards go unnoticed as regulators focus on the big players.

Vetter strongly recommends companies of all sizes familiarize themselves withOSHA’s powered industrial truck regulations, since ignorance is no excuse. In addition to endangering employees, disregarding the details can sap a company’s performance in other ways.


About the Author

Josh Bond, Senior Editor
Josh Bond is Senior Editor for Modern, and was formerly Modern’s lift truck columnist and associate editor. He has a degree in Journalism from Keene State College and has studied business management at Franklin Pierce University.

Subscribe to Logistics Management Magazine!

Subscribe today. It's FREE!
Get timely insider information that you can use to better manage your entire logistics operation.
Start your FREE subscription today!

Article Topics

All Topics
Toyota Material Handling Resources
The Real Impact of Forklift Financing
Whether you decide to buy new equipment outright or take advantage of leasing programs, how you manage your forklift investment can have a lasting impact. In this whitepaper, explore a wide variety of topics to help you establish your material handling equipment purchasing philosophy.
Download Now

Best Practices for Efficient Distribution Center Returns
正在忙着outbound fulfillment is great. But it can come with a troublesome side effect: a surge in returns. Examine reverse chain best practices, including types of racks and aisle configurations in return areas, steps such as unloading, staging, and triage, and what types of material handling vehicles support efficiency.
Download Now

Toyota Material Handling Videos

Latest Whitepaper
Should you lease or buy your lift truck fleet?
Leasing critical equipment like lift trucks can offer flexibility, but some lease terms can be complex and costly if you’re not careful.
Download Today!
From the February 2023 Logistics Management Issue
Supply chains worldwide will continue to be caught between politics, economics and ecology in the future. Whether there will be more regionalization or nearshoring remains to be seen. The question will linger: Who will win and who will lose in this increasingly tense competition?
Putting the retail supply chain in reverse gear
Medline builds on success with mobile robotics
View More From this Issue
Latest Webcast
Why accurate, real-time location data is a must for efficient operations
Find out how next-generation workforce management apps use accurate, real-time location data to power successful operations in this webinar with Radar CEO and Co-Founder Nick Patrick.
Register Today!
EDITORS' PICKS
Global Logistics 2023: Supply chains under pressure
Supply chains worldwide will continue to be caught between politics, economics and ecology in the...
2023 Rate Outlook: Will Shippers Catch a Break?
Our annual gathering of freight transportation industry analysts reveals some common themes, largely...

Top Logistics News Stories of 2022
The Logistics Management editorial team presents the top 10 logistics stories of 2022.
2022 Trade Update: Who’s on first?
Here are a few highlights of the key regulatory changes that took place over the course of 2022 that...