Complete Safety Solutions
About Complete Safety Solutions

Complete Safety Solutions (CSS) is headquartered near Akron, Lancaster County in Southeastern Pennsylvania. Starting as a service to offer mine safety training to contractors serving limestone quarries in the area, CSS has grown to offer a full line of services to help you in your safety compliance efforts whether you need assistance on a single item or an entire program. We serve large corporations and owner-operators.

Our training philosophy is that safety is your best investment when done well and a waste of everyone's time when not. When it comes to safety programs we favor quality over quantity. A well designed simple program is easier to manage and more likely to be followed. With training we believe that it has to be interesting and engaging or it will have no practical effect. When done well, safety is everyone's silent partner keeping employees and businesses alike profitable and happy.

Good safety programs aren't expensive, they're priceless!

 
Randy E. Newcomer

Randy Newcomer developed and ran CSS for his employer for nearly ten years before buying the business and striking out on his own in 2009. He has been involved in mining since 1984 and in mine safety since 1988. Previously he was a middle school teacher where he learned the importance of entertaining a class as well as educating it. Before that he spent some years getting dirty around dangerous equipment employed in manufacturing and as a cabinet maker. He'll show you the scars that taught him the importance of safety.

Randy conducts the training at CSS and develops the training materials and programs. His materials have won first place in the National Mine Safety Academy's Training Materials Competition. He has presented at the TRAM Conference at the Mine Safety Academy, Pennsylvania Aggregates and Concrete Association conferences, the Penn State MSHA Seminar, and National Meetings of the Joseph A. Holmes Safety Association. He has presented at MSHA Spring Thaws in Southeast and Central Pennsylvania and Maryland. He has developed materials for teachers to introduce mineral resource education to the classroom and has conducted workshops for the Pennsylvania Department of Education, State Parks, and the Eastern Section of the National Association of Geoscience Teachers.

Randy's qualifications include: MSHA approved instructor, and completion of college courses in safety engineering. Randy succesfully sat for the Certified Mine Safety Professional exam and spent years as a member of International Mine Safety Professionals. He served on various committees with the Pennsylvania Aggregates and Concrete Association and is a past president of a chapter of the Joseph A. Holmes Safety Association.