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Safety Training for Managers & Supervisors

Safety Training for Managers & Supervisors. Accountability and Safety Culture – Fundamentals Part 1.

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Safety Training for Managers & Supervisors

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  1. Safety Training for Managers & Supervisors Accountability and Safety Culture – Fundamentals Part 1 Disclaimer: These safety materials, resources and PowerPoint® presentations are not intended to replace your company's health and safety policies or to substitute for specific state and federal standards. We do not guarantee the absolute accuracy of the material contained within these resources. Please refer to applicable state and federal standards for regulatory compliance.

  2. The Business Case for Safety • Humanitarian need • Regulatory compliance • Liability and cost control • Operational risk reduction • Improved productivity • “Valued neighbor”

  3. Leadership – The Starting Point • Establish company values • Set and enforce company policies • Consistently demonstrate commitment • Be the “role model” for desired behavior • Communicate expectations • Create desired work culture • Stay on top of things, and follow up

  4. The Four A’s • Attitude • Awareness • Action • Accountability

  5. Safety Awareness Level Awareness Awareness Relaxation Relaxation Incident Incident Awareness level that steadily rises

  6. Safety Awareness Level • What is your attitude toward safety? • Do your actions reflect a steady awareness?

  7. Management Responsibilities • Assume primary responsibility for the safety program • Establish policies, goals, objectives and measurements • Push authority and accountability down to supervisor level

  8. Manager Tips Do you really hold your supervisors accountable? • Supervisors will only perform to the level they are measured: • Tie accountability to incentives and performance evaluations • “Provide training on cost basis so they better understand the direct and indirect costs” – Doyle Weldon, roundtable member

  9. Manager Tips • Peer pressure can leverage accountability • “Measure supervisors amongst their peers in a group setting” – David Etchelecu, roundtable member

  10. Supervisor Responsibilities • Know all safe work practices/rules pertaining to his / her job • Accept responsibility to ensure the application of safe work practices • Explain all applicable safe work practices • Ensure employees are trained and competent

  11. Supervisor Responsibilities • Consistently enforce safety regulations • Perform daily inspections of his/her respective work • Report / correct unsafe conditions • Assist in incident investigations

  12. Supervisor Responsibilities • Support management and employees in their efforts to establish a proactive safety culture • Be familiar with laws, directives and policies mandated by the company and customers, OSHA and other regulatory agencies • Be visible to your employees

  13. Supervisor Tips • Review policies and procedures, and make sure you understand • Freely ask questions of management for clarity • “Do it once instead of twice – it can cost 125% more”- Bill Flynt, roundtable member • Lose production • Lose efficiency • Lose customer rapport

  14. Communicate Responsibilitiesto Your Employees • Do you understand that safety is a condition of employment? • Work safely to the best of his / her ability • Report unsafe conditions immediately • Obey safe work rules, and follow safety instructions • Do you understand your safety responsibilities?

  15. Communicate Responsibilitiesto Your Employees • Regardless of the type of work you are doing, do you know that you can never deviate from an established safe work procedure? • Do you know you have the right to discuss any work assignment with your supervisor that you think is unsafe or you are unsure of? • Assist in correcting the problem • Do I have your complete commitment to work safely at all times?

  16. Who Should Be Held Accountable? • Managers and supervisors • Employees • Pay attention to employees who deviate from known safe work procedures either before, during or after completion of their assigned tasks

  17. Accountability: Intervention • Whenever an employee is behaving in an unsafe or unhealthy way, supervisors have a moral and legal obligation to intervene immediately • The employee may get hurt • If the employee knows the supervisor has seen the unsafe behavior and has not intervened, the employee (and everyone else watching) will think the supervisor does not regard working safely as essential

  18. Accountability: Intervention • Intervention should accomplish several goals: • Stop an unsafe act before it leads to an incident or illness • Replace an unsafe behavior with a safe one • Help employees learn to make better choices about working safely

  19. Supervisor Tips Key steps in performing an effective intervention: • Point out the unsafe behavior • Get the employee to acknowledge the unsafe behavior • Get the employee to suggest proper safe behavior

  20. Supervisor Tips Key steps in performing an effective intervention: • Have the employee explain the risks of working unsafely • Get the employee to agree that the gains were not worth the consequences • Establish a formal action plan for improvements

  21. Accountability: Positive Reinforcement Reinforcing safe work habits is just as important as eliminating unsafe behavior • Most people tend to repeat behaviors that result in positive consequences and discontinue those that result in negative consequences • Positive reinforcement is the only means available to maintain existing good behavior

  22. Accountability: Positive Reinforcement There are several ways in which supervisors can reward safe behavior • Verbal acknowledgment • Public praise • Material rewards

  23. Accountability: Disciplinary Actions Keys to Success • Be consistent and unbiased • Evaluate the frequency and severity of the act • Approach employee with his or her best interests in mind • Remind employee about external effects of incidents

  24. Supervisor Tips How do you communicate with your employees? • You will get less mileage if you yell and shout at your employees when you spot unsafe behaviors • “Don’t automatically draw conclusions”- Rick Webb, roundtable member

  25. Creating a Culture How do we define a culture? • A common set of attitudes, values and beliefs shared by an organization • The way things are around here

  26. More Than a Regulation By developing a strong safety culture, we ultimately create an environment where each employee becomes responsible for their safety and the safety of their fellow employees

  27. Safety Culture Benefits • Unsafe behavior stands out • Unsafe behavior is unacceptable • Safe work is influenced through peer pressure • Consistent planning and task execution • Cost avoidance

  28. Common Beliefs Safe work cultures start with simple, common beliefs that are supported by all employees in an organization • Every incident could have been avoided • No job is worth getting hurt over • Every job will be done safely • Most importantly, we believe that safety is everyone’s responsibility • “I am my brother’s keeper” – Joann Natarajan, roundtable member

  29. Safety Program Fundamentals A safety culture is built through the establishment of a fundamentally sound safety program • Management commitment • Policy statement • Program goals • Employee recognition • Employee training • Hazard analysis / correction • Behavior-based safety

  30. Supervisor Role in a Safety Culture • Task planning • Employee education • Enforcement • Leadership by example • Clear communication

  31. Safety Culture: What it Isn’t • Created in the absence of visible leadership • Exclusive • Created by mandate • A regulatory requirement • Created in a short time • Created with little effort • Maintenance-free

  32. Transforming a Safety Culture Who does it start with? Everyone, including You

  33. Signs of a Safety Culture • Management leading by example • Reduced injury rates • Changes in employees’ attitudes regarding safety

  34. Signs of a Safety Culture • Heightened participation by employees in safety meetings • More conversations regarding safety • Employees adhering to safe work practices in the absence of the supervisor

  35. How Can We Get There? Long-term achievement is a product of day-to-day effort

  36. Safety Culture Asking me to overlook a simple safety violation would be asking me to compromise my attitude toward the value of your life

  37. Q: Management responsibilities do not include assuming primary responsibility for the safety program. A: False QuizAll Questions True or False

  38. Q: Supervisor responsibilities include ensuring the application of safe work practices. A: True QuizAll Questions True or False

  39. Q: Safety is a condition of employment. A: True QuizAll Questions True or False

  40. Q: Regardless of the type of work you are doing, you can deviate from an established safe work procedure if you want to. A: False QuizAll Questions True or False

  41. Q: Managers, supervisors and employees should all be held accountable. A: True QuizAll Questions True or False

  42. Q: Reinforcing safe work habits is just as important as eliminating unsafe behavior. A: True QuizAll Questions True or False

  43. Q: A safety culture is a regulatory requirement. A: False QuizAll Questions True or False

  44. Q: Everyone adhering to safe work practices in the absence of the supervisor is a sign of a safety culture. A: True QuizAll Questions True or False

  45. Safety Safety has no final destination……… ….. It is a constant journey

  46. Resources • Safety Pays: http://osha.gov/dcsp/smallbusiness/safetypays/index.html • Stop Work Card • Behavior-Based Safety

  47. Lower Incidents No one gets hurt at work through LOWER* incidents *(Limiting Oilfield Workers' Exposures and Risks) Go to next presentation

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