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DAY ONE & BEYOND

INTERIOR CONSTRUCTION & CONTRACTORS Note: This guidance does not relieve each General Contractor from the responsibility of creating and maintaining a site-specific safety plan for each project. The Association of General Contractors has additional information available here: https://workingsafe.agc.org/. • General Guiding Principles • All guidance from Federal and State Government; OSHA; and Local Building Departments shall prevail • Any person expected to report to a jobsite who feels sick prior to arriving or throughout the course of the day should inform their manager and leave the job site immediately • Proactive Planning for Logistical Hot Spots • General contractors and trade partners must jointly present plans for reducing headcount at the following logistical hot spots: morning meetings, safety stand downs, shanties, lunch breaks, hoist access, shift changes. • Site access, breaks, and meetings must all be limited to groups of 10 individuals or less and should keep distance • Where practical (i.e. queuing for hoist, entry/exits to site), physical barriers or visual guides will be installed to encourage appropriate physical separation • Protections and Site Access • Access to job sites should be monitored and all people reporting to work should present a valid ID and be logged for tracing purposes.[1] • Masks and gloves should be worn and displayed prior to access. Surplus supplies of PPE should be available for any worker wishing to commute • Thermal reading should be taken prior to elevator access. Individuals with a body temperature in excess of 100* should not be granted entry. Workers who are not granted access will be allowed back on site, after being cleared by a doctors’ note.[2] • PPE should be utilized at all times of the workday. • Physical/Social Distancing on Sites • An overall limit of 1 tradesman per 250 square feet of project area should be maintained. This should NOT include supervision. • Work shifts should be staggered to allow schedules to move forward with acceptable density levels • Depending on size of the elevators, access should be limited to four people after access protocols are performed • Per CDC guidance, if face covering is not worn, six feet of distance should be maintained between workers at all times. • Separate tools should be available and only used by individual workers. • Break areas should be monitored to maintain social distancing. If possible, staggered break times and lunches should be instituted to avoid large gatherings of workers. • Cleaning • Sanitary wipes should be made available to tradesman to wipe down personal tools each night. • Enhanced cleaning of shared surfaces should be performed daily. • Hand washing and sanitation stations should be provided at a count of 1 per 25 tradesmen. • Where possible, utilize an approved disinfectant spray on all deliveries.

[1] Personal identifying information will be kept for site health and safety records ONLY.

[2] All information individual medical information will remain private, and records will be maintained in a manner consistent with HIPAA privacy protections.

RECOVERY READINESS: TRI-STATE

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