Onsite and virtual electrical safety training built for Atlanta's data center corridor, the Port of Savannah's logistics complex, and Georgia's automotive, aerospace, and poultry processing industries — covering the 2027 NFPA 70E edition's new additional-person and PPE requirements. Led by Certified Safety Professionals under federal OSHA compliance requirements.
Georgia has become one of the busiest logistics and data center markets in the country — the Port of Savannah is among the highest-volume container ports in the United States, and the Atlanta metro has grown into a top-tier hyperscale data center hub. Layered on top of that is a diverse manufacturing base: automotive assembly in West Point, aerospace manufacturing in Marietta and Savannah, and one of the nation's largest poultry processing industries centered around Gainesville. All of it runs on electrical systems that require NFPA 70E-trained qualified workers, and with no state OSHA plan, federal OSHA enforces those requirements directly across Georgia.
New sessions are added to the calendar regularly. Contact us for the next confirmed Georgia date, or join a live virtual session open to GA teams from anywhere in the state.
Open-enrollment and private onsite dates serving Atlanta, Savannah, and facilities throughout GA.
Live, instructor-led virtual NFPA 70E training runs monthly and is open to Georgia teams from anywhere in the state.
The Atlanta metro has grown into one of the country's largest hyperscale data center markets, with operators building out massive UPS plants, generator paralleling gear, and medium-voltage switchgear. Qualified electrical workers maintaining these facilities need NFPA 70E training built around 24/7 energized-by-default operations.
The Port of Savannah is one of the busiest container ports in the United States, and the distribution and warehousing infrastructure that surrounds it — along with Atlanta's position as a national logistics hub — runs high-voltage material handling and cold storage electrical systems that require qualified worker training.
Georgia's automotive assembly operations in West Point and the aerospace manufacturing base in Marietta and Savannah operate high-amperage production and precision manufacturing electrical systems where arc flash hazard analysis and qualified worker training are required by both federal OSHA and prime contractor safety standards.
The Gainesville area anchors one of the largest poultry processing industries in the country. These facilities run 480V motor control centers, refrigeration systems, and processing line equipment in wet, high-humidity environments where qualified workers face daily arc flash exposure and PPE requirements shift with the conditions.
Georgia's electrical contracting industry serves Atlanta's dense commercial and data center construction market alongside industrial buildouts statewide. Contractors whose workers perform energized electrical work need NFPA 70E 2027-trained personnel under federal OSHA enforcement of 29 CFR 1926 Subpart K.
Georgia's large film and television production industry runs extensive temporary power distribution for soundstages and location shoots — a hazard environment unique to the state that requires qualified electricians trained on generator paralleling, distro panels, and temporary power NFPA 70E requirements.
Georgia has no OSHA-approved State Plan, which means electrical safety enforcement for private-sector employers falls directly to federal OSHA — OSHA's Atlanta Region office. Federal OSHA inspectors enforce 29 CFR 1910 Subpart S for general industry and 29 CFR 1926 Subpart K for construction, and reference NFPA 70E as the recognized consensus standard for meeting those requirements during an inspection.
NFPA 70E 2027 is the consensus standard federal OSHA inspectors reference during electrical safety inspections — and with Georgia's data center construction boom and Port of Savannah growth, inspection activity across the state continues to increase. Employers who cannot document current qualified worker training, energized electrical work permits, and a functioning PPE program face direct citation exposure.
Georgia's industry mix means a single employer may operate hyperscale data center switchgear, port logistics cold storage, and poultry processing MCC environments under one safety program — each with distinct arc flash hazard categories and PPE requirements under NFPA 70E 2027. We build every Georgia program around the specific voltage levels, environments, and federal OSHA inspection priorities your workers actually face.
Both formats are delivered onsite at your Georgia facility by CSP-credentialed instructors. Curriculum is built around your specific electrical systems, industry environment, and federal OSHA compliance requirements.
Full NFPA 70E 2027 curriculum with group exercises designed around Georgia industrial environments — UPS and switchgear scenarios for data center technicians, cold storage MCC work for logistics and poultry processing, and temporary power scenarios for film production electricians.
Condensed review of NFPA 70E 2027 changes for workers with prior training. Covers updated documentation requirements, PPE program changes, and regulatory priorities relevant to federal OSHA compliance in Georgia data center and logistics facilities.
Georgia has no OSHA-approved State Plan for the private sector, so federal OSHA enforces electrical safety requirements directly through OSHA's Atlanta Region, based in Atlanta. NFPA 70E 2027 is the standard those inspectors reference when evaluating an employer's electrical safety program.
Yes. We deliver training onsite at facilities across Georgia, including the Atlanta data center corridor and Savannah's port and logistics complex. We customize the curriculum around your facility's specific electrical systems, voltage levels, and hazard categories.
All sessions are capped at 20 participants. For larger data center or distribution center teams, we schedule multiple sessions so workers from different shifts can attend sessions tailored to the equipment they actually work with.
We respond to every inquiry within 24 hours. Contact us with your location, workforce size, and industry — we'll build a training program around your specific federal OSHA compliance requirements and facility electrical environment.
Onsite or private virtual — scheduled around your shift, delivered to your whole crew at once, at direct-client rates. No open-enrollment seat limits.