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Many employers assume that providing PPE is enough to satisfy electrical safety requirements. It is not. OSHA requires that workers exposed to electrical hazards be trained — and that training must align with NFPA 70E standards. The consequences of skipping or cutting corners on training go far beyond a citation. Here is what the regulations actually say, and what you risk without compliant training.

What OSHA Requires for Electrical Safety Training

OSHA’s 29 CFR 1910.332 requires that employees who face a risk of electrical shock, burns, or other electrical injuries must be trained in electrical safety practices. This requirement applies to any worker who operates, maintains, installs, or works near energised electrical equipment. The training must cover the specific electrical hazards they face on the job.

NFPA 70E Article 110 goes further, requiring that training be documented, that workers demonstrate proficiency, and that retraining occur whenever an employee is observed not following safe electrical work practices or when new hazards are introduced. Training must also be delivered by a qualified instructor.

What Are the Consequences of Non-Compliance?

OSHA can issue citations under 29 CFR 1910.332 and the General Duty Clause. Serious violations carry penalties of up to $16,550 per violation as of 2024, and wilful or repeated violations can exceed $165,514 per violation. But the financial penalties are only part of the picture:

What NFPA 70E-Compliant Training Actually Looks Like

Compliant electrical safety training is not a 15-minute online module. NFPA 70E-aligned training covers arc flash hazards, approach boundaries, PPE selection and inspection, lockout/tagout procedures, and safe work practices for specific tasks in your facility. It should be hands-on, facility-specific, and delivered by an instructor with documented credentials.

Bowtie Engineering’s 8-hour onsite NFPA 70E training program is led by credentialed instructors, tailored to your facility’s specific hazards, capped at 25 participants for quality instruction, and includes written testing and certification documentation. We also support multi-site rollouts for national and regional organizations.

Schedule your team’s NFPA 70E Electrical Safety Training with Bowtie Engineering. Questions about compliance requirements? Contact our team for a free consultation.