Protect Pressroom, Warehouse, and Delivery Teams Through Winter Slip Hazards 

Printing and publishing operations depend on tight production schedules, continuous material flow, and on time distribution. Winter weather creates slip risks that can disrupt those workflows fast. Crews move across icy employee entrances, frozen loading docks, snow packed trailer approaches, and wet floors that refreeze near open bay doors. Drivers and distribution teams also face slick sidewalks, parking lots, and delivery routes during early morning and overnight shifts.

Ice Cleats for Printing & Publishing

A single slip can lead to injury, delayed runs, missed shipping windows, and costly claims. At Winter Walking, we do not just sell ice cleats. We help printing plants, publishers, and distribution centers implement traction solutions that fit your facility layout and winter exposure, keeping teams upright and output moving. 



Why Printing and Publishing Facilities Choose Winter Walking:

  • Built for Dock, Yard, and Plant Transition Zones
    Printing and publishing sites often combine indoor concrete floors, outdoor ramps, dock plates, trailer beds, and snowy staging yards. Our traction solutions are selected to grip on these mixed surfaces without slowing production movement.

  • Supporting Shift Continuity and Shipping Deadlines 
    Whether you are producing daily papers, packaging inserts, books, or commercial print, timing is everything. Slip incidents pull workers off the floor and delay loading or distribution. A traction program reduces winter disruptions so deadlines stay on track.

  • Reliable Grip for Distribution and Route Personnel 
    Drivers, dock staff, and route teams walk on icy lots, compacted snow, and slick sidewalks during pickup and delivery. We help you equip these roles with traction that supports safe movement from dock to destination.

  • Aligned with Safety KPIs and Plant Standards 
    Plants track recordables and near misses closely, especially where forklifts, pallet jacks, and fast material handling systems are active. A proactive traction strategy lowers cold weather slips and strengthens winter readiness. 



Do You Need Ice Cleats?