No such thing as a "safe" light for RA-4, at least in 2024 readily available materials in my experience. I have the Heiland Color LED Safelight and unfortunately it is not actually color safe, but it is passable if your vision is strong. I wish I saved the tests, but in my darkroom the light is only "safe" at the lowest setting and when more than 6 feet away from the paper for any period shorter than 2 minutes. Basically putting a coin on a sheet of paper and exposing it to the "safe" light for longer than 2 minutes will show visible fog. That's not to say that the paper isn't compromised at shorter times. Similar to pre-flashing this safelight will build exposure prior to visible density. With Fuji CAii paper it will show as a magenta fog.
I used my color safelight to cut down RA-4 paper rolls with a guillotine style cutter. I'll put the roll on a holder and pull paper through the cutter making 8x10 sheets for 30 minutes at a time. Each sheet is only exposed for the time it takes me to rotate the roll, pull out the paper, cut it, and put it in a paper safe, maybe 30-60 seconds. All of the paper processes fine, but I'm sure it would exhibit color shift if it was held up to any sort of exacting standard. Every sheet exhibits a tiny bright magenta strip at the edge of the paper from the prolonged exposure even with the light turned all the way down. The strip appears at the edge because although each sheet doesn't receive exposure longer than 30-60 seconds while cutting, the end of the paper roll is being exposed the entire time.
The safelight is nice if you are processing in trays, but I have to stress that you could easily practice and achieve the same tasks in pitch black. The light dimmed to a "safe" level gives about the same amount of light as a light leak around the edge of a door. It's minuscule and your eyes take more than 1 minute to adjust to that level of light in my experience. If the room lights are on while I'm prepping for an exposure, and I turn the lights off to make an exposure my eyes aren't adjusted until I'm pulling the paper from the developer tray.
Thankfully I've upgraded to an RCP20 for processing, and a finger "safe" guillotine cutter that I'm comfortable operating carefully in the dark. I'm not upset about the purchase even though it's practically useless as a color safelight. It's still a great narrow spectrum safelight for black and white printing.