Workplaces know they need safety, and perhaps take it for granted that everyone will work safely, while workers assume management will protect them. How do workplaces know their safety management system is working to the full potential?
In the past year, compliance has been a top priority in navigating through the coronavirus pandemic and the various disruptions its created in industry. Safety professionals have been successful in following core elements of a basic program and crafting it to address their facility's unique challenges.
According to a recent poll of more than 200 industry professionals by safety expert Allen Woffard, most respondents said the top safety issues they focus on the most lately are personal protective equipment, permits or other documents, and upper management support.
"The response from that small group of hands was surprising," Woffard said. He addresses these findings in his popular podcast, "Dragging Up 6.0."
Priorities can pivot at any time, for any workplace, based on the unique needs of a facility or worksite. While workplace changes and challenges are common, there are core behaviors every safety program needs.
"I went from construction to labor to safety coordinator to safety engineer to safety manager over 40 years," said Jack Dayley of Spokane, Washington. "One of the reasons I became a safety manager is because I see things. [For example,] the guy with no safety glasses standing on an elevated platform next to a flimsy-looking barrier fence. I had to investigate five fatalities during my career, one in which I witnessed a good friend who was burned to death in a molten metal explosion. Each one of those fatalities strengthened my resolve to do everything I can to prevent another one from occurring. I'm 72 now and am still at it, still learning."
Each August, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) conducts its national Safe + Sound Week to encourage workplace health and safety program success. Some of the event's key focuses are:
Support all activities with consistent and clear communication, from training materials all the way down to floor marking and signs and labels. This ensures that everyone in the workplace knows what to do to maintain an expected level of safety and efficiency.