National Forklift Safety Day on June 9, 2026, spotlights the need for focused forklift operator training and safe equipment practices. Now in its 13th year, the Industrial Truck Association’s initiative reminds all industries that most forklift incidents are preventable, and prevention costs less than incidents.

For warehouse managers and EHS leaders, the day is most valuable when it prompts a genuinely honest review of where the facility currently stands. A real set of questions that surfaces the gaps before an incident or an OSHA inspection does. These are five every warehouse manager should address on June 9.

1. When Was Each Operator Last Evaluated Against Their Actual On-the-Job Performance?

OSHA’s Powered Industrial Truck Standard requires operators to be evaluated on the specific trucks they operate in their actual workplace conditions. A certification card from general training only documents completion and does not fully meet OSHA’s requirements.

An operator with online certification from two years ago who has never been formally observed using a loaded reach truck in your narrow aisles may be trained but not adequately evaluated. OSHA requires refresher training and re-evaluation after any incident, near miss, or observed unsafe behavior, and also when an operator is assigned a different truck type. Many facilities treat these triggers as optional, especially under production pressure. A genuine review of evaluation records, incident history, and equipment assignments will often reveal gaps that documentation reviews alone miss.

2. How Many Near Misses Last Month Went Unreported?

Near-miss reporting is one of the most reliable indicators of forklift program health, and also one of the areas where facilities most consistently deceive themselves. A facility with zero recorded near misses is rarely a facility with zero near misses. It is usually a facility where the culture around reporting has made workers reluctant to document events that did not result in injury.

According to the NSC, for every serious workplace injury, there are approximately 29 minor incidents and over 300 near misses. In forklift-heavy environments, that means dozens of unreported close calls every month. For June 9, ask whether your facility has created conditions in which workers feel safe reporting those events and whether there is a system in place to act on what is reported. Near-miss data only drives change when reporting is treated as a contribution rather than an admission of fault.

3. Are Your Pedestrian-Forklift Separation Controls Still Accurate?

Floor markings fade. Bollards get moved. Temporary storage creates new paths. Traffic patterns shift as operations change. A well-designed separation plan from two years ago may no longer reflect how people and equipment actually move through your facility today.

Walking the floor with staff who work in affected areas every day, rather than reviewing a floor plan in an office, typically reveals the gap between documentation and reality. Pedestrians cut through forklift travel lanes to save time. Operators reverse through areas with obstructed sightlines because product storage has changed around them. These are not simply compliance failures. They result from facilities evolving faster than safety controls are updated. Thirty percent of forklift accidents occur in warehouses, and pedestrian interactions account for a disproportionate share of serious incidents. The separation between people and equipment is the most important physical control on the floor and deserves a regular review.

4. Does Pre-Shift Inspection Actually Happen Every Shift?

OSHA requires pre-shift inspections covering brakes, steering, controls, warning devices, tires, and other safety-critical components. If defects are found that affect safety, the forklift must be taken out of service until repaired. In many facilities, there is a meaningful gap between documented inspections and actual inspections. When forms are completed in the break room before a shift starts, or the same checkboxes are marked daily without the operator leaving the seat, the inspection becomes a paperwork exercise.

Operators who conduct genuine daily inspections and feel empowered to tag out a vehicle without fear of pressure from supervisors form the foundation of a mechanical safety program that actually functions. On June 9, ask whether you could confidently describe what actually happens during pre-shift inspection at your facility, beyond what the forms show.

5. Does Your Protection Program Work When Training and Markings Fall Short?

Training, signage, floor markings, and operator certification all contribute to a safer forklift environment. Every one of them also depends on human consistency, and human consistency is not something any facility can guarantee across every shift, every operator, and every interaction between a forklift and a person on foot.

For National Forklift Safety Day, consider whether your protection program includes a layer that operates independently of human attention when mistakes occur. Proximity sensing technology like TruSense Forklift adds exactly that layer: automatic alerts when a forklift comes within six feet of a pedestrian, triggered in real time regardless of whether the operator noticed the worker or the worker looked up in time. It reinforces foundational safety elements during the lapses in human attention that no training program can fully eliminate.

If reviewing your forklift safety program surfaces gaps in how your facility manages pedestrian-forklift interactions, or if you want to understand what a TruSense pilot looks like in your highest-risk zones, the expertise to help you close those gaps is available. Safer. Every Day.

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What to Do Now

Warehouse managers and EHS leaders can take concrete steps on or before June 9 to evaluate their forklift pedestrian safety exposure:

  • Pull operator evaluation records and map them against current equipment assignments. Identify any operator who has not been formally evaluated on the specific truck they currently operate in your facility conditions, and any whose last evaluation predates a recent near miss or equipment change.
  • Review your near-miss log for the past 90 days. If the log is sparse, it reflects a gap in reporting culture rather than a safe floor. Plan a direct conversation with workers on June 9 about what close calls have gone undocumented and why.
  • Walk the floor with someone who works in the highest-risk zones every day. Verify that floor markings, bollards, and travel lanes still reflect how people and equipment actually move. Document anything that has drifted from the original separation plan.
  • Observe a full pre-shift inspection in person. Confirm that operators are conducting genuine equipment checks rather than completing paperwork in the break room. If the process has become a documentation exercise, June 9 is the right moment to reset expectations.
  • Identify whether your program has a technology layer. If your protection depends entirely on human attention and behavior, a TruSense proximity sensing pilot in your two highest-risk zones is a low-friction way to find out what close calls you have been missing.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is National Forklift Safety Day 2026? 

National Forklift Safety Day 2026 falls on Tuesday, June 9. It is observed annually on the second Tuesday of June and is led by the Industrial Truck Association.

What does OSHA require for forklift operator evaluation? 

OSHA’s Powered Industrial Truck Standard (29 CFR 1910.178) requires that operators be evaluated on the specific trucks they operate in their specific workplace conditions. Refresher training and re-evaluation are required after any incident, near miss, observed unsafe behavior, or when an operator is assigned a different truck type.

How common are forklift near misses in warehouses? 

According to the National Safety Council, for every serious workplace injury, there are approximately 29 minor incidents and over 300 near misses. In forklift-intensive environments, this translates to dozens of unreported close calls every month in most facilities.

What is proximity sensing technology for forklifts? 

Proximity sensing technology uses wearable sensors on pedestrians and mounted sensors on forklifts to detect when the two come within a dangerous distance of each other. When a forklift comes within six feet of a person wearing a sensor, both units respond with immediate vibration and light alerts, providing an automatic protection layer that operates independently of human attention.

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