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Making Sense of Risk Assessment

Making Sense of Risk Assessment. Chris Jerman CFIOSH, FIIRSM Safety Manager John Lewis. You can’t be 100% safe Great ideal but unrealistic goal You can’t risk assess everything So why are we trying to? The Law recognises this Significance is different for everyone

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Making Sense of Risk Assessment

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  1. Making Sense of Risk Assessment Chris Jerman CFIOSH, FIIRSM Safety Manager John Lewis

  2. You can’t be 100% safe Great ideal but unrealistic goal You can’t risk assess everything So why are we trying to? The Law recognises this Significance is different for everyone What does ‘safe enough’ look like? Not to me, but to YOU Time for an open mind

  3. Looking for rules Looking for rules • Lack of confidence • Driven by liability not law • Fear of getting it wrong • Shotgun approach to safety • Myths and misunderstanding • Rules. What rules? • We’ve had 20 years to get this done

  4. It’s not about doing different things

  5. Are we agreed? Who are you? What do you do – undertakings? What does ‘safe’ look like to you? How will you know when you are there? What will you do when you get there? How will you deal with distractions? How will you preserve your achievements? Risk and safety are NOT the same thing Risk management road map

  6. 5 steps to risk management Work out what you do as a business Prioritise the significant and shelve the trivial Risk assess and record significant findings Act as appropriate and proportionate Monitor and manage the residue Don’t forget to scan the horizon for new (significant) issues! 5 steps to risk management

  7. Are you here?

  8. Explaining Significance Focus and map your priorities Insignificant task with significant risk (HML) Significant task with significant risk (HML) Insignificant task with insignificant risk (Trivia) Significant task with insignificant risk (NSF) LEVEL OF RISK SIGNIFICANCE

  9. Let’s talk about managers

  10. Why do managers struggle Why do managers struggle? Home truths • Leaders are born; managers are made • How do you become a manager? • What support is there? • How can WE support managers in being BETTER managers in relation to managing risk as a subject?

  11. Learning outcomes Learning outcomes • Managers may know more than they think • The subject shouldn’t matter • Sometimes they can’t see past that • Managers rarely get to practice • If they can’t get through this then they are not going to get far with what you want them to do • Is this in your course syllabus?

  12. Practical example L Practical example Develop a plan for risk management action H M M M L H H M H M M M L L H H H M L M L H M M H M M H H L M M L L L M H H M H L L L L H L M H M

  13. Managing safely Do managers really need ‘training’ in ‘health and safety’ or would they simply benefit more from training in being better managers? Managers need to be shown the aspects of their team’s activities that require supervision and management – it’s not intuitive Give managers the tools

  14. Clarity and confidence Clarity and confidence We assume that managers understand basic tools such as • Prioritisation • Planning • Assigning responsibility • Determining accountability • Your safety management system!

  15. Safety in three slides? Safety in 3 slides? Is that possible? • Just what do managers need to understand about the law? • Not what do managers need to know, but what they need to understand • Being simple and clear • Might be a few light bulb moments

  16. Traditional Model

  17. 1992 and all that

  18. Risk Centred

  19. Opal Fruits v Starburst Opal Fruits v Starburst Simple understanding • What could go wrong? • Assessment • How will we stop that happening? • Control • What will we do if it does? • Emergencies and recovery

  20. Overlapping approach Start in the right place People Equipment Locations

  21. Process approach Step 1 2 3 4 5 Process approach

  22. Setting start and end points Priority ________ ________ ________ Task title ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________ ________  X X    X X  X Enables us to determine and demonstrate which tasks are significant and which are not There has to be less significant than insignificant Define that first then and see what’s left How would we show that we looked and said ‘no’? Can a number of tasks be grouped together?

  23. Risk Assessment No absolute model, as long as it works Pick ‘n’ Mix from: Putting the assessment in context Identifying key hazards, not all. Identify what could go wrong, why and to whom What stops this going wrong – and does it work Scores – if and ONLY IF, you need them Risk Assessment

  24. Sea of Trivia Risk Profile LEVEL OF RISK SIGNIFICANCE

  25. Suitable and sufficient Just training?

  26. Suitable and sufficient Linked to Risk Assessment?

  27. Likelihood is key Competency plays a huge role in this – but competency in WHAT? Please don’t say Health and Safety Task driven competency Do it well, do it less often Refresh, don’t repeat Supervisors need to participate Managers need to understand to buy in Likelihood is the key to success

  28. Do what you’ve always done You’ll get what you’ve always got. If that is good, then fine, well done If you think the end is just around the corner, then great – share your success with us If you think that there’s another 40 years’ work here then maybe you really need to have a really good think Do what you’ve always done

  29. Will we be doing what we’ve been doing for another: 100 years? 50 years? 30? 10? 5? If a line has to be drawn, where will YOU draw it? So …… So…

  30. End Thank you for not throwing rocks

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