
Low Voltage Qualified Electrical Worker
Safety Training

This course covers fundamental NFPA 70E electrical safety rules, helping employees comply with OSHA regulations and stay up-to-date with the latest safety practices.
Ideal for maintenance technicians, electricians, engineers, EHS personnel, and managers, this training empowers your team to work safely and confidently around low-voltage electrical systems. Spanish is available on request.
There are several ways to attend the Low Voltage Qualified Electrical Worker Safety Training course. You can enroll now in the next webinar or start learning online today. Alternatively, use the form below for more options and group rates.
Check out a video preview of the training course below:

At a Glance
What it is
An accessible, in-depth class with practical instruction and best practices to maximize electrical safety.
Who it's for
Qualified electrical workers: electricians and engineers.
Electrical safety stakeholders: Maintenance and safety staff and managers.
Why you need it
Achieves compliance with OSHA and NFPA 70E regulations and equips your electrical maintenance and supervisory employees with the knowledge and skills to recognize the shock and arc flash hazards that they encounter in their daily work activities.
Available languages
English. Spanish on request.
Duration
6 or 8 hours
How to Learn
Enroll Today:
1. Attend the next live monthly Low Voltage Qualified Electrical Worker instructor-led webinar
Reviews
“I have been through many of these types of trainings throughout my career and this was absolutely the BEST! Presented very well, with a lot of useful information that usually gets skipped over by other trainers, and the presenter was very personable.”
Jim Daulton
Course Details
Qualifications / Prerequisites:
A basic understanding of electrical systems.
What You Will Learn:
Our course equips electrical workers with the knowledge and practical skills needed to recognize the shock and arc flash hazards that they encounter in their daily work activities.
Students will understand the decision-making process necessary to assess the associated risk, perform job safety planning, select the appropriate risk control methods, including the proper use of PPE.
-
Types of electrical hazards in the workplace, the hierarchy of safety controls, and related OSHA regulations
-
Explanation of an OSHA Consensus standard
-
How electricity affects the human body
-
The distinction between step and touch potential
-
Methods for Safe Contact Release
-
Understand the definition of a qualified person and the steps to create an electrically safe condition
-
Identify the proper test instrument for verifying the absence of voltage
-
Recognize the Limits of Approach
-
Description of protective barriers/shields and recommended alerting methods
-
How to select/test insulating gloves and recognize effective insulating tools
-
Requirements for flexible cord use, maintenance, and inspection
-
Understand of the requirements for a job brief requirements and for performing energized work safely
-
Understand arcing faults, arc flash/blast hazards, and how to read arc flash warning labels
-
Understand the relationship between time, fault current and incident energy
-
Determine personal protective equipment (PPE) requirements based on incident energy, and understand the care, maintenance, rating, and limitations of arc flash PPE
-
Conducting arc flash and shock hazard risk assessments
Included in the Course
-
All Courses: Documented tests, instructor-led demonstrations, and class exercises designed to meet the OSHA and NFPA 70e requirements for qualified worker training.
-
In-Person Only: A hard copy of Rozel's 86-page electrical safety instruction manual developed by Rozel's staff of Professional Engineers and NFPA Certified Electrical Safety Compliance Professionals. Students will use this manual to follow along with the lesson material being presented and can be used as a future reference for safe electrical work practices.
-
Electrical Safety Job Aids such as Energized Electrical Work Permits, Prejob brief cards, Arc flash and shock hazard PPE Poster, etc.
-
A completion certificate. Employers can receive a student sign-in sheet for their records as requested.