3354 Coffey Ln Ste A, Santa Rosa, CA, United States of America, 95403
Disclaimer: This blog post is not a comprehensive guide on forklift certification. Please refer to the California Occupational Safety Health Administration (Cal/OSHA) forklift regulations for more information.
If you are new to a winery, wine cellar, or warehouse, you may be uncertain how to obtain your certification to operate a forklift. The team at Gravity Wine House wanted to share our anecdotal knowledge about getting certified in forklift operation.
Wineries use forklifts to move materials around inside and outside of the winery. If you aspire to drive a forklift, you should know that the law requires training, evaluation, and certification before the operation of a forklift in the workplace. Why? The goal of training and certification is to keep workers safe and reduce injuries caused by unsafe lift truck handling. We follow all state and federal regulations for the operation of forklifts specified by Cal/OSHA, along with best safety practices, and want to share some of them with you.
General Forklift Certification Tips
While OSHA does not provide forklift training, they require employers to provide certification opportunities for their employees, either in-house or at a nearby facility. On-site employer certification streamlines the certification and training process, as workers learn safe forklift operation practices within their specific work environment. Regardless of certification location, all workers must receive hands-on training at the employer’s warehouse prior to forklift operation on-site.
The certificate obtained following certification shows the date of training and evaluation, and the names of the operator, trainer, and evaluator. Employers must maintain an up-to-date record of employee certifications for compliance purposes, and active drivers must be re-trained at their worksite before the three-year expiration.
Although there are seven types of forklift classifications, a worker only needs certification and training for the forklift classifications relevant to their workplace. As an employer, we ensure that our forklift drivers are well versed in the safe operating procedures for the forklift class that we use at Gravity Wine House: Class 1, Electric Motor Rider Trucks.
Training in specialized equipment is necessary for employees at wineries that use such attachments in conjunction with the forklift to ensure safe forklift operation. Specialized equipment includes specific fork lengths to accommodate winery barrel racks or additional hydraulic valves. While standard forklifts typically have three hydraulic valves, winery forklifts may have four valves to allow for a dedicated bin rotator valve. While the details of training requirements can be overwhelming, questions about best forklift practices are encouraged throughout the training process.
Forklifts are indispensable machines for winery operations.
New Operator Forklift Training
If your goal is to be certified, then you will need to follow specific steps. First and foremost, you need to be 18 years old to obtain a workplace forklift certification. Classroom instruction and evaluation by a qualified trainer are required for certification. Instruction includes pertinent information about all aspects of the forklift and its safe operation and can be completed online or in-person. As a future forklift operator, you will learn about personal protective equipment (PPE), how to identify site hazards in the workplace, and the parts of the forklift. Classroom sessions conclude with lessons on textbook safety operations and standard operating procedures (SOP). While some forklift certification programs may require a written test, this is not a requirement to be certified.
During the training process, it’s a good idea to ask about the PPE required in your winery or workplace, as regulations do not specify the PPE required for forklift operation. During the hands-on driving instruction, you may be asked to wear PPE, such as steel cap boots, a hard hat, safety glasses, gloves, or other items. When driving a forklift, seatbelt use is always required.
As a forklift operator, you’ll learn how to use three-point contact to enter the forklift and how to evaluate the work site for potential hazards. You will need to pass the driving test, prove that you can correctly use the forklift, and demonstrate the proper use of forklift SOPs to receive your forklift certification and wallet card.
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Our facility and every single piece of equipment here are very special to us.
Wine production spaces are complete with a sorting table and delicate de-stemmer, tank or basket press options, open and closed top tanks with hot and cold glycol, gentle Waukesha pumps, Blue Line winery hoses, Bulldog Pups, and much, much more.
Our laboratory is equipped with a broad selection of fine-tuned and precise equipment: spectrophotometer, Anton Paar Alcolyzer, densitometers, autotitrator, centrifuge, turbidimeter, carbodoseur, and more.
Then to our bottling line. The term well-oiled machine never applies so much as here. A DS-12 by US Bottlers, filler & valves by 4-D Machine, cork, screw cap and foils all applied with Bertolaso’s wonderful range of machinery, Impresstik for labels—all work together to offer a finished package.
Winemaking is often said to be an art. True. But modern wine quality is high because of science, and the studious approach our industry has taken to understanding soil, grapevines, farming, weather, oak barrels, microbiology, wine, and sensory chemistry, among other fields.
These are the areas of focus we love.
Title | Name | Phone | Extension | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Operations Manager | Michael Zardo | zardo@gravitywinehouse.com | 707.545.6670 | |
Production Coordinator | Lindsey Svendsen | lindsey@gravitywinehouse.com | 707-545-6670 |
Locations | Address | State | Country | Zip Code |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gravity Wine House | 3354 Coffey Ln Ste A, Santa Rosa | CA | United States of America | 95403 |