Workplace violence affects all industries, and salons face specific risk factors that require proactive prevention measures. OSHA requires employers to provide a workplace free from recognized hazards, which includes the hazard of workplace violence. Some states have enacted specific workplace violence prevention laws that mandate written plans, employee training, and reporting procedures. Salon owners must assess their violence risk factors, develop prevention policies, train staff to recognize warning signs, and establish response procedures. This guide covers workplace violence prevention compliance for salon businesses.
Several characteristics of salon operations contribute to workplace violence risk. Salons serve the general public, including individuals who may be agitated, intoxicated, or experiencing mental health crises. Cash transactions create robbery targets. Late operating hours in some salons reduce the natural surveillance that daytime foot traffic provides. Domestic situations may follow employees or clients into the salon. The personal nature of salon relationships means that difficult conversations about services, pricing, or dissatisfaction can escalate quickly.
OSHA categorizes workplace violence into four types. Type I involves criminal intent, where the perpetrator has no legitimate relationship with the business, such as during a robbery. Type II involves client violence, where a current or former client commits violence against an employee. Type III involves worker-on-worker violence between current or former employees. Type IV involves personal relationships, where someone with a personal relationship to an employee, such as a domestic partner, enters the workplace and commits violence.
Salons face exposure to all four types. Cash handling and retail product inventory create Type I robbery risk. Dissatisfied clients or those with behavioral issues create Type II risk. Employment disputes and interpersonal conflicts create Type III risk. The predominantly female salon workforce faces elevated Type IV domestic violence risk.
OSHA's General Duty Clause requires employers to furnish a place of employment free from recognized hazards that are causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm. If workplace violence is a recognized hazard in the salon's industry and environment, the employer must take reasonable steps to address it.
Several states have enacted workplace violence prevention plan requirements. California's SB 553, effective in 2024, requires virtually all employers to develop and implement a workplace violence prevention plan, provide training, maintain an incident log, and conduct periodic plan reviews. Similar legislation has been proposed or enacted in other states.
Workplace violence prevention requirements come from OSHA guidelines, state-specific workplace violence laws, and general employer safety obligations.
Written prevention plan requirements in mandating states require employers to develop a written workplace violence prevention plan that identifies risk factors, describes prevention measures, establishes response procedures, and designates responsible individuals. The plan must be workplace-specific and address the actual hazards present in the salon environment.
Training requirements mandate that employers train all employees on the workplace violence prevention plan, how to recognize warning signs of potential violence, de-escalation techniques, reporting procedures, and emergency response actions. Training must be provided at hire and periodically thereafter.
Incident reporting and logging requirements mandate that employers maintain a log of all workplace violence incidents, including threats, physical altercations, and property destruction. The log must record the date, time, location, type of violence, circumstances, and any injuries. Incident data must be reviewed periodically to identify patterns and improve prevention measures.
Environmental controls include measures such as adequate lighting, security cameras, panic buttons, barriers between employees and the public, and visibility from outside the premises. These controls reduce the opportunity for violence and facilitate response when incidents occur.
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A safe workplace is fundamental to the operational quality that the MmowW assessment evaluates. Violence prevention measures protect both employees and clients.
Assess your salon's violence risk factors. Consider your location, operating hours, cash handling practices, client base, and history of incidents or threats. Determine whether your state requires a written workplace violence prevention plan. Review whether you have provided violence prevention training to employees. Check whether your salon has environmental safeguards such as security cameras, adequate lighting, and emergency communication capabilities.
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Try it free →Step 1: Conduct a Risk Assessment
Evaluate your salon's specific violence risk factors. Consider the neighborhood crime rate, building layout, visibility from outside, operating hours, cash handling volume, and history of incidents. Interview employees about any threats, uncomfortable encounters, or safety concerns they have experienced.
Step 2: Develop a Written Plan
Create a workplace violence prevention plan tailored to your salon. Include risk factor identification, environmental controls, behavioral warning signs, reporting procedures, response protocols, and the roles and responsibilities of staff during an incident. Designate a plan administrator.
Step 3: Implement Environmental Controls
Install security measures appropriate to your risk level. Common measures include security cameras at entrances and in service areas, adequate exterior and interior lighting, locks on doors that can be secured during emergencies, a panic button connected to security or emergency services, and cash handling procedures that minimize the amount of cash on premises.
Step 4: Train All Employees
Provide workplace violence prevention training to all employees at hire and annually thereafter. Cover recognition of warning signs, de-escalation techniques, reporting procedures, evacuation routes, shelter-in-place procedures, and how to contact emergency services. Practice response scenarios.
Step 5: Establish Reporting Procedures
Create a clear process for employees to report threats, concerning behavior, or incidents of violence. Encourage reporting of all incidents including verbal threats and near-misses. Maintain an incident log with required information. Review reports promptly and take appropriate action.
Step 6: Review and Update
Review your workplace violence prevention plan at least annually and after any incident. Update the plan to address new risk factors, lessons learned from incidents, and changes in the workplace environment. Document all reviews and updates.
Staff should remain calm and speak in a steady, non-confrontational tone. Acknowledge the client's frustration without becoming defensive. Use de-escalation techniques such as active listening, empathizing with the client's concern, and offering solutions within your authority. Maintain a safe physical distance and position yourself near an exit. Do not argue, raise your voice, or make physical contact. If the client's behavior escalates to threats of physical violence, disengage from the conversation and move to a safe area. Alert other staff members and contact management. If the situation becomes immediately dangerous, call emergency services. Document the incident after it is resolved, including what triggered the aggression and what de-escalation techniques were used.
Effective environmental measures include security cameras positioned to cover entry points, service areas, and cash registers. Adequate lighting inside the salon and in parking areas deters criminal activity. Door locks that can be engaged during emergencies provide shelter-in-place capability. A panic button or silent alarm connected to emergency services enables rapid response. Keeping cash register funds low through regular drops to a secure location reduces robbery incentive. Positioning the reception desk to provide visibility of the entrance and salon floor enables early identification of threats. Removing obstacles that block sight lines allows staff to see approaching individuals. Posting emergency numbers prominently ensures staff can contact help quickly.
Take the report seriously and immediately. Work with the employee to develop a safety plan for the workplace. Measures may include notifying reception staff to be alert for the threatening individual, moving the employee's workstation away from windows and doors, providing the employee with a panic button or direct phone line to emergency services, varying the employee's arrival and departure times, and arranging escort to parking areas. Alert other staff members to the situation to the extent necessary for safety without disclosing private details. Consider involving law enforcement if a credible threat has been made. Document all steps taken. Some states require employers to provide leave for employees dealing with domestic violence situations. Check your state's domestic violence leave provisions.
Workplace violence prevention protects your team and your business. Evaluate your salon's safety measures with the free hygiene assessment tool and develop your violence prevention plan using this guide. For comprehensive salon compliance management, visit MmowW Shampoo. 安全で、愛される。 Loved for Safety.
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