Only 1 in 5 Small Businesses are Hiring Student Workers This Summer
Of Those Hiring, Only Half Require Workplace Safety Training for Their Student Employees
EMPLOYERS Small Business Opinion Poll Snapshot:
- 19 percent of small businesses are planning to hire student workers this summer
- 27 percent of small businesses do not offer workplace safety training for new student workers
- 52 percent of small businesses that intend to hire students this summer require they go through workplace safety training
Small businesses that plan to hire students this summer don’t anticipate much difficulty finding employees. Three-fourths of them said they expect finding a student worker to be easy. Small businesses value students because of their flexible schedules (33 percent), lower pay rate (27 percent) and ability to bring fresh ideas (14 percent).
Most small businesses that are hiring this summer are looking to fill clerical or office work positions (42 percent) or need help with construction work or manual labor (41 percent). Only 13 percent plan to fill restaurant or food service positions and only 4 percent are hiring for retail jobs.
Among business owners, there is greater demand for college students than high school students. More than half (53 percent) of small business owners plan to hire college students this summer, followed by 39 percent who are looking for high school students. Only 6 percent anticipate hiring a post-graduate student.
Workplace Safety Training for Students Often Overlooked
“Many small businesses don’t recognize the risks associated with student
workers and don’t provide any type of workplace safety training,” said
EMPLOYERS Chief Operating Officer
More than one out of four small business owners polled (27 percent) said they do not offer workplace safety training for new student workers they employ. Among those who do offer it, only half (52 percent) say that it is required.
Small businesses that employ students may overlook workplace safety training due to a false sense of security. “Last summer, only three percent of business owners who hired students reported that they had one get injured or ill on the job,” Festa explained. “While a low incident rate is good news, overlooking workplace safety is a poor business decision. By creating a culture of safety, costly employee injuries may be prevented.”
Festa recommends small business owners follow these four steps to ensure the safety of all their employees:
-
Identify and assess potential hazards: Business owners and
managers should take time to identify and document potential hazards
as well as put proper safety procedures in place before employees use
equipment or materials. For example, rubber-soled shoes should be worn
by all employees in restaurants or warehouses where floors are
slippery. Documenting these procedures is especially important because
it establishes a record that can be referenced in the event of an
OSHA inspection or insurance audit. - Provide education and training: Business owners should regularly provide all workers with information and training on their injury and illness prevention programs. It is especially important that training sessions are held whenever new substances, processes, procedures or equipment are introduced into the workplace. Training should include how to identify potential hazards, how to prevent common accidents and what to do if one occurs. Workers must be trained in a language that they understand, especially in a bilingual environment.
- Enlist management and employee participation: Employees at all levels should be involved in establishing, implementing and evaluating safety programs. Managers should be encouraged to lead by example and be held accountable for workplace safety.
- Evaluate program effectiveness: Business owners must routinely evaluate their workplace safety program. Annual reviews should be completed or whenever new or previously unknown hazards are discovered.
EMPLOYERS offers additional resources to help small business owners design and implement workplace safety programs through its website.
Methodology
All figures, unless otherwise stated, were collected by SSRS SmallBiz
Omnibus, an independent market research company. Interviews were
completed via telephone with a nationally representative sample of 505
small business owners that have fewer than 100 employees. Fieldwork was
conducted
About
Copyright © 2014 EMPLOYERS. All rights reserved.
Source:
Employers Holdings, Inc.
Media
Ty Vukelich, 775-327-2677
Vice
President, Corporate Marketing
tvukelich@employers.com
or
Analysts
Vicki
Erickson Mills, 775-327-2794
Vice President, Investor Relations
vericksonmills@employers.com