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Marine Detachment Fort Sill Presidents Day OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT & 2008 MISHAP GOALS Operational Risk Management doesn’t just reduce mishaps,it.

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Presentation on theme: "Marine Detachment Fort Sill Presidents Day OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT & 2008 MISHAP GOALS Operational Risk Management doesn’t just reduce mishaps,it."— Presentation transcript:

1 Marine Detachment Fort Sill Presidents Day OPERATIONAL RISK MANAGEMENT & 2008 MISHAP GOALS
Operational Risk Management doesn’t just reduce mishaps,it improves our ability to accomplish the mission efficiently and effectively. Note the term “operational” on this slide...it doesn’t say “safety”. The goal of this presentation is to give you a thorough understanding of the ORM process, selected tools, practical applications and implementation ideas so that you can lead the way for implementation in the Marine Corps. The training which follows is designed to give the Marine an understanding of this quarters Safety Theme as well as a basic review of the ORM process. 1

2 Overview Conduct Pre-holiday ORM Training Introduce 2008 SAFETY GOALS
The following will be presented during this period of instruction: Pre-Holiday ORM Training 2nd Quarters Safety Theme Questions

3 How many of you are familiar with risk management?
What is it?

4 Step one is: Identify Hazards - Identify hazards to the force
Step one is: Identify Hazards - Identify hazards to the force. Consider all aspects of current and future situations, environment, and known historical problem areas. Define a hazard.

5 What are Hazards? TASK / MISSION ACTION CONDITIONS HAZARDS I
INTERFACES MACHINE TASK / BETWEEN MISSION HUMAN ELEMENTS OF ENVIRONMENT SYSTEM Hazard : Any real or potential condition that can cause injury, illness, or death of personnel, damage to or loss of equipment or property, or mission degradation. ALTC7-2

6 Identify those hazards most likely to result in loss of combat power.
IDENTIFY HAZARDS OBJECTIVE Identify those hazards most likely to result in loss of combat power.

7 Hazard ID Tool Adequate YES NO Example - Support - Is type/amount/capability/condition of support adequate to carry out the mission? - Personnel Equipment/material - Supplies Services/facilities - Standards - Is guidance/procedure adequately clear/ practical/specific to the mission? - Training - Is training adequately thorough and recent? - Leader - Are leaders ready, willing and able to enforce standards. - Individual/Unit - Is the Marine/unit prepared and rested sufficiently to perform the mission? Protect the Force Through Risk Management

8 STEP 2: Assess Hazards Assess Hazards Assess hazards to determine risks. Assess the impact of each hazard in terms of potential loss and cost, based on probability and severity. Risk Management Process

9 ASSESS HAZARDS - HOW HISTORICAL DATA INTUITIVE ANALYSIS JUDGMENT TOOL

10 Frequent - Occurs often, continuously experienced.
PROBABILITY Seldom FREQUENT LIKELY OCCASIONAL SELDOM UNLIKELY Frequent - Occurs often, continuously experienced. Likely - Occurs several times. Occasional - Occurs sporadically. Seldom - Unlikely, but could occur at some time. Unlikely - Can assume it will not occur.

11 SEVERITY Death or permanent total disability, system loss, major property damage. Catastrophic SEVERITY Permanent partial disability, temporary total disability in excess of 3 months, major system damage, significant property damage. Critical Minor injury, lost workday accident, compensable injury or illness, minor system damage, minor property damage. Marginal First aid or minor supportive medical treatment, minor system impairment. Negligible

12 ASSESSMENT TOOL

13 STEP 3: Develop Controls
& Make Decision Develop Controls & Make Risk Decisions Develop control measures that eliminate the hazard or reduce its risk to an acceptable level. As control measures are developed, risks are reevaluated until all risks are reduced to a level where benefits outweigh potential cost Risk Management Process

14 DEVELOP CONTROLS Consider: Question: Are controls established?
Is the control practical and in line with Marine Corps orders? Does the control create a new hazardous condition? Is the control within authority level? Has the control affected probability or severity or both? Question:

15 Are the controls adequate?
TOOL Example Are the controls adequate? Adequate YES NO - Support - Is type/amount/capability/condition of support adequate to carry out the mission? - Personnel Equipment/material - Supplies Services/facilities - Standards - Is guidance/procedure adequately clear/ practical/specific to the mission? - Training - Is training adequately thorough and recent? - Leader - Are leaders ready, willing and able to enforce standards. - Individual/Unit - Is the Marine/unit prepared and rested sufficiently to perform the mission? Protect the Force Through Risk Management

16 Make Risk Decision Make risk decisions at the appropriate level.
Commanders make decisions by: -Making on-the-spot decision -Establishing decision guidance subordinate leaders are to use -In the absence of specific guidance, provide a philosophy so subordinates can act Accept risks only if the benefits outweigh the costs or losses. As Marines our focus is to ensure that the decision authority is known, procedures for determining that authority and mission risk level is established and that controls and control data bases are available and are incorporated into procedures for the program or process we are involved in. 9/20/2018

17 IMPLEMENTATION METHODS
Regulations, policy letters, and SOPs Orders Briefings and back-briefs Training Rehearsals

18 STEP 5: Supervise & Evaluate
Perform to, and enforce standards and controls. Evaluate the effectiveness of controls and adjust/ update as necessary. Risk Management Process

19 Supervise All Marines are responsible for: (self-discipline)
Performing to standard Executing controls Recognizing and reporting unsafe acts or conditions Leaders are responsible for enforcement Supervision and responsibility go hand in hand. All Marines are responsible for supervising themselves (self-discipline). What that means is that every Marine is responsible for performing to standard and executing controls. Also, every Marine is responsible for recognizing unsafe acts or conditions and, depending on the situation and time requirements, making on-the-spot corrections and/or bringing it to the attention of the chain of command. Leaders and supervisors are also responsible for ensuring standards and controls are adhered to and enforced. Some ways to accomplish this are spot checks, inspections, situation reports, buddy checks and continuous or direct supervision.

20 Evaluate -Effectiveness of Controls (adjust/update)
-Accuracy of assessment -Newly identified hazards -Need for additional controls Lessons learned -Ensure lessons learned are fed back into the system for future operations This step is essentially initial planning for the next iteration of the mission. All personnel involved in the implementation of controls should be part of the evaluation process. Individuals responsible for the implementation of controls should evaluate their effectiveness using feedback from Mariners and adjust or update controls as necessary. Once the mission has been completed, ensure that an After Action Review (AAR) is conducted with your subordinates and superiors.

21 Now…how many of you are familiar with risk management?

22 “THINK SAFE, BE SAFE, LIVE SAFE!"
FY08 SAFETY GOAL “THINK SAFE, BE SAFE, LIVE SAFE!" TRANSISTION INTO THE 2ND QUARTER SAFETY THEME…"Safety is Continuous"

23 THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE
SUBJECT: Zero Preventable Accidents 30 May 2007 I am committed to reducing preventable accidents as one of the cornerstones of the Department of Defense’s Safety Program. Consistent with the President’s Safety, Health, and Return-To-Employment (SHARE) initiative, I have set some very specific mishap reduction goals for the Department. We are focused on closely monitoring our most pressing mishap area: civilian and military injuries, aviation accidents, and the number one combat killer of our military, private motor vehicle accidents. We can no longer tolerate the injuries, costs and capability losses from preventable accidents. Accidents cost the Department about $3 billion per year, with indirect costs up to four times that amount. We have made progress in reducing aviation accidents and civilian lost work days, but have much more to do to address military injuries and private motor vehicle fatalities. Our goal is zero preventable accidents, and I remain fully committed to achieving the 75% accident reduction target in 2008. The current focus of our Safety Council is on increasing the accountability of individuals and leaders, as well as pursuing safety technologies. Accountability and leadership are key to an effective safety program. I urge you to continue to emphasize safety in the workplace and hold leaders accountable for their safety programs. Your efforts will make the Department a safer place to work, and more capable of defending the Nation and her interests. We have no greater responsibility than to take care of those who volunteer to serve. R.M. GATES

24 MARINE ARTILLERY DETACHMENT FORT SILL
FY 08 SAFETY AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH GOALS FY 08 GOALS ASSESSMENT PLAN (OBJECTIVES/ACTIONS) MEASURE Systematic Management of Risk Slips, Trips, Falls Contact With Objects Vehicle mishaps Reduce this area by 20% Increasing training on personal ORM. Reduce this area by 20%. Increasing training on personal ORM. Implement PPE usage in areas that wearing gloves would reduce or prevent mishap. Reduce this area by 10%. Increase coverage of traffic safety. Enforce Force Preservation Order. Reduction of mishaps reported and reduction in severity of mishap. Reduction of vehicle mishaps/ DUI’s. Safety Climate and Culture Current safety climate and culture is Excellent. The safety mindset is being set in all hands. Continued support of the safety program from all hands. Continued training will be provided to all hands. 100% completion of all required safety training by all hands. Knowledge of the safety program and participation. The unit briefing is in the title. Each sub-unit indicates their worst rating (G-A-R) and in what category(s). The unit briefing provides a composite of their worst rating and in what category. The remarks are used to show what drove the rating. Also used to highlight initiatives that drove a “Green” rating. The example shows a sub-unit (2d Brigade) was rated “Red” in POV and Water Safety. The reasons are stated in the remarks.

25 MARINE ARTILLERY DETACHMENT FORT SILL
FY 08 SAFETY AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH GOALS FY 08 GOALS ASSESSMENT PLAN (OBJECTIVES/ACTIONS) MEASURE Efficient, Effective Management of Program Execution The Unit Safety Officer for the command tracks all safety data on a excel spread sheet, the WESS II data base and OSHA form 300 for all mishap reporting. Continue and increase training to all hands on safety program. Ensure section Safety Representatives are trained in mishap criteria and ensure proper reporting of all mishaps. All safety training completed. Overall reduction in mishaps by 40% for 2008. Accident Reduction The Commands plan is to reduce the following: 20% in slips, trips, and falls 20% in struck by objects 10% in vehicle mishaps Establish mindset on safety by pushing personal ORM values to all hands. Increase efforts on mentioned areas to reduce mishaps. Increase training on traffic safety. Success will be determined by a reduction in mishaps in these areas. 40% is the goal but effort will be made to make the percentage as high as possible. The unit briefing is in the title. Each sub-unit indicates their worst rating (G-A-R) and in what category(s). The unit briefing provides a composite of their worst rating and in what category. The remarks are used to show what drove the rating. Also used to highlight initiatives that drove a “Green” rating. The example shows a sub-unit (2d Brigade) was rated “Red” in POV and Water Safety. The reasons are stated in the remarks.

26 Summary Risk management is not an additional task, it is a process that will be incorporated into everything we do--on and off Duty. Doing so, provides reasonable alternatives for successful task accomplishment and empowers users to make informed decisions. Marine Corps leadership from the highest levels is committed to integrating risk management into all we do so it becomes a routine part of planning and executing every task and mission. The overall goal is to integrate risk management into all activities and into every individual's behavior, both on and off duty. Risk management is not a science; it doesn't provide leaders with a precise course of action. Neither is it just "common sense" or "something good leaders have always done." It is an important tool that can be fully integrated into established Marine Corps systems for all operations.

27 Questions?

28 I have a question for you:
How many steps are there with regard to Operational Risk Management (ORM)? There are 5 step to ORM. ADDRESS YOUR QUESTION TO THE CLASS


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