Careful Early Planning is Key to Designing Loading Docks that are Both Highly Efficient and Safe
2025-01-17
During the hot summer months, a loading dock can quickly become an unpleasant place to work. That is unless you’ve taken the proper steps to prepare your docks to help employees combat excessive summertime heat and other environmental factors.
Non-air conditioned interiors in warehouses, distribution centers and industrial facilities with little or no air movement, sun exposure on the dock itself, and trailers that can reach in excess of 100 degrees inside, can all combine to cause added stress on employees and dramatic drops in productivity.
Studies show that when the ambient temperature of the surrounding air is 95 degrees or higher, the benefits of radiation, convection and conduction stop working to lower body temperature. Evaporation is the body’s only remaining defense to cool itself off. Heat stress is a very serious issue because occupational exposure to heat can also result in injuries, disease, and even death.
According to a June-August 2016 long-range outlook released in March by The Weather Company’s Professional Division, this summer is shaping up to be a warm one over much of the U.S. as a transition from El Niño to La Niña conditions are expected.
Well-above average temperatures are expected this summer for the northern tier of states, from the Pacific Northwest into the northern Plains, Great Lakes, and Northeast. Warmer than average temperatures will also extend from southern California into the central and southern Plains and Southeast.
To help increase awareness about such workplace dangers during the past few decades, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has evaluated a variety of scientific data on heat stress and hot working environments. NIOSH first published its detailed findings in 1986 in its well-known report, Criteria for a Recommended Standard: Occupational Exposure to Hot Environments, most recently updated in February 2016.
In the report, NIOSH states that although workers can acclimatize themselves to different levels of heat, each worker has an upper limit for heat stress beyond which that worker can become a heat casualty. Further, it has been shown that a worker’s ability to focus attention and the worker’s reaction times can be dramatically reduced by even a 2 percent dehydration level due to heat stress.
Smart heat-reducing solutions are available now
With such heat-related issues once again on the horizon as the summer months draw closer, using the old adage “because that’s the way we’ve always done it” isn’t worth risking your employees’ health and safety due to lack of proper prevention.
Fortunately, the Kelley brand includes smart and effective solutions that will help alleviate heat stress on your employees at the loading dock, or even prevent it altogether. They include:
When using HVLS industrial fans, additional air movement across the skin means better evaporation on humid days when there’s little or no help from Mother Nature. In addition, increased air movement across floors that have become wet or moist due to condensation also results in dryer conditions and a higher level of safety for employees.
This summer, don’t take unnecessary risks with your loading dock employees’ health and safety. Prevention is key.
Combining common sense approaches to avoiding heat stress, such as teaching employees the important warning signs and to self-monitor, making sure they have access to and drink plenty of water BEFORE they’re thirsty, and encouraging employees to wear lightweight, light-colored, loose-fitting clothes—along with making sure you have the right equipment at the loading dock—will help your employees combat the rigors of summer heat this year and in years to come.