housekeeping

Pallet Storage and Housekeeping

Guide 6 of 30 in the WSWG warehouse safety and workplace security library.

How better housekeeping reduces trips, falls, product damage, blocked exits and forklift congestion.

Most warehouse problems are not caused by one missing sign or one imperfect device. They usually come from a combination of layout, pressure, visibility, training, maintenance and unclear responsibility. This guide is designed to help you convert a broad issue into practical site checks your team can act on.

Why this matters

Warehouses change constantly. Pallet locations move, seasonal stock arrives, new staff start, contractors attend site, vehicles queue, and temporary fixes slowly become normal practice. A useful safety or security system must therefore be easy to inspect, easy to explain and resilient when the site is busy.

For best results, walk the area at different times of day. A loading dock at 8:00 am may behave very differently from the same dock at 3:30 pm. A camera view that looks perfect during installation may be blocked by stock two weeks later. A pedestrian route that looks safe on a drawing may not match the shortcut people actually take.

Action checklist

  • Set clear standards for empty pallet stacks, damaged pallets and overflow storage.
  • Keep emergency exits, eyewash stations, extinguishers and electrical boards unobstructed.
  • Use floor markings for quarantine, returns, dispatch and staging areas.
  • Assign ownership of zones so housekeeping is not everyone’s job and therefore nobody’s job.

Implementation notes

Start with a simple floor walk and record what is actually happening. Take photos, mark up a floor plan and talk to the people who use the area every day. Prioritise controls that remove the hazard or physically separate people from danger before relying on reminders, signs or supervision alone.

Assign each improvement to a person and a due date. A checklist is only useful when it creates ownership. For security-related work, document the purpose of each camera, alarm sensor, access door or intercom so future changes do not undermine the original design.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Storing fast-moving goods in places that force constant cross-traffic.
  • Letting shrink wrap, straps and cardboard accumulate around picking areas.
  • Treating housekeeping as a cleanup task instead of a layout and process issue.

Review rhythm

Review this topic after incidents, near misses, layout changes, new equipment, new tenants, seasonal peaks and major staffing changes. A quarterly review is a good starting point for many sites, but high-risk zones such as docks, yards, charging areas and forklift routes may need more frequent checks.

General information only: This guide is not legal, engineering, WHS or installation advice. Always confirm requirements for your state, site and industry.