OSHA, Safety, & Risk Management Courses
At Alaska Risk Management, we deliver high-quality OSHA General Industry 10- and 30-hour courses. These in-person, instructor-led courses are OSHA Authorized and come with an OSHA credential card upon completion of the class. OSHA courses are the best way to ensure compliant, documented, quality training for your teams. Anchorage scheduled courses are held at Learn to Return's training facility. This unique training allows for practical, hands-on instruction including live fire extinguisher training, fall protection introduction and confined space awareness in addition to the classroom sessions for all courses.

OSHA Courses


The OSHA 10-Hour is a basic safety and health training course for entry-level workers in construction or general industry, covering common hazards, worker rights, and prevention methods. It is a common requirement for employment and site access in many industries. The training includes sections on hazard identification and control, personal protective equipment (PPE), and how to file complaints.
The OSHA 30-Hour is a training course designed for supervisors and workers with safety responsibilities, providing a deeper understanding of safety and health hazards, workers' rights, and employer responsibilities. The curriculum focuses on hazard recognition, avoidance, control, and prevention, with specific courses available for industries like construction and general industry.
OSHA Requirements
These courses must be delivered by an OSHA-authorized trainer. Alaska Risk Management provides OSHA-authorized instructors with practical experience that delivers attention-grabbing delivery with in-person, instructor-led, hands-on training that will ensure a quality course that will educate workers to work safely in any environment.
Whether the courses are held in Anchorage at Learn to Return’s training facility or brought directly to you at your location in Alaska, program satisfaction is guaranteed.
Upon successful completion, participants receive a plastic wallet card issued by the Department of Labor, which is often referred to as the OSHA 10- card. This card serves as a lifetime credential.
A4 Safety Program

Alaska Risk Management developed a behavior-based safety program called A4 Safety to use as a practical tool for safety and risk management in the workplace. This 4-hour training will teach management and front-line workers to assess hazards, work as a team to reduce risks, and help to create and maintain a company safety culture by providing a baseline on which to build. Participants will be provided with in-person safety instruction on the program, laminated cards to carry in the workplace, and documented training records for regulatory compliance.
A4 Safety is a simple-to-use system that is intended to serve as a Pre-Work Risk Assessment, Job Hazard Analysis, or Safety Meeting tool. By addressing the four main categories of Attitude, Attention, Assistance, and Action, teams can uncover the common failure points and mitigate the hazards before they become a problem. Identifying common exposures and applying adequate risk controls are crucial to managing risks in the workplace.
Attitude: Is everything. An optimistic team that is working off the same sheet of music and fit for duty makes all the difference.
Assistance: On occasion, management and workers encounter risks that need additional solutions. Knowing who to ask sometimes makes the difference between a good and a bad outcome. When this occurs, companies need an avenue to seek in-house professionals, outside safety professionals, or insurance company loss control consultants, and maybe even OSHA. By using these resources that are available, positive results can occur.
Attention: Conducting a specific job hazard analysis, using standard operating procedures, and keeping an eye on exposures and each other creates a culture of workplace safety where everyone manages risk.
Action: Workers need to have the ability to observe hazards that pose risks, but those workers also need the ability to stop work when hazards arise. Stop work authority provides that answer, and allows for evaluating exposures and controls, and reporting and investigating near misses that may occur.






