Service
First aid kit inspection & restocking.
OSHA requires every workplace to have adequate first aid supplies. Most restaurants have an expired, half-empty kit nobody's checked in years. We restock yours during every fire inspection visit — or as a standalone monthly route service.
Why first aid compliance matters
OSHA's general workplace standard (29 CFR 1910.151) requires "adequate" first aid supplies, and ANSI/ISEA Z308.1-2021 defines what "adequate" actually means. Most restaurant first aid kits we see have:
- Expired bandages, ointments, and burn gels
- Missing items because staff used them and never replaced them
- The wrong class (Class A) for a food service environment
- No record of who's checked it or when
- Located somewhere nobody can find it during an actual emergency
A failed health department inspection or an actual workplace injury without a functional first aid kit can mean fines, OSHA citations, and liability exposure. For five minutes of restocking during your fire inspection visit, that's a problem we just solve.
ANSI Class A vs B
Class A — low-risk environments like offices, retail, and most restaurants. Basic supplies for cuts, burns, and eye injuries.
Class B — high-risk environments like industrial kitchens, warehouses, and construction sites. Everything in Class A plus splints, tourniquets, and additional quantities.
First aid kit pricing
| Service | Sioux Falls Pricing |
|---|---|
| First aid kit inspection + restock (during fire visit) | $50–75 |
| New ANSI Class A first aid kit (sold + installed) | $75–100 |
| New ANSI Class B first aid kit (sold + installed) | $125–175 |
| Routine monthly route service (per visit) | $35–50 |