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What Safety Success Does Not Look Like…

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Presentation on theme: "What Safety Success Does Not Look Like…"— Presentation transcript:

1 What Safety Success Does Not Look Like…
Show the video. It will be fun to watch. You may want to watch it a couple of times to pre determine a few answers.

2 How To Track Safety Success
“What is not measured, cannot be managed” How To Track Safety Success

3 …having good tools, PPE, and equipment? …having excellent processes?
3 What is Safety Success? Is it… …having good tools, PPE, and equipment? …having excellent processes? …having good communication? …having good organization and housekeeping? …providing good quality training? …being OSHA and EPA compliant? …not having injuries? It is all of these and many more….

4 There is no “Concrete” Answer
To Have Success this formula seems to have the components necessary; Leadership + Systems + Culture + Environment

5 Components Necessary for Safety Success?
A common Vision Safety System Assertive Leadership Active communication Proactive mindset Compliance with Regulatory (EPA/OSHA) Accountability Engagement and Involvement (all levels) Behavior / Hazard Identification Training and Education Resources

6 Vision

7 Safety System

8 Leadership

9 Must be Proactive Proactivity Avoid Level of Proactivity Pre-empt Self
Correct External Alert React Ignore Anticipate and Fix Issues Recognize potential problem and provide solutions A problem exists. Problem identified. Actions taken Level of Proactivity Outsiders ID problem Damage Happens. Must Repair Damage Happens. Nothing Changes

10 2 Way Communication

11 Acting in advance to deal with an expected difficulty;
Proactivity Acting in advance to deal with an expected difficulty;

12 Compliance and Regulatory

13 Accountability

14 Engagement / Involvement

15 Behaviors / Hazard Observation

16 TRACKING SAFETY Success
The previous items were reviewed to provide definition to items which can be tracked. TRACKING SAFETY Success

17 Leading and Lagging Indicators
The Trick is…you have to figure out the right stuff to measure…

18 Trailing and Leading Indicator Examples
Trailing Indicator Examples Leading Indicator Examples Injury frequency and severity Near misses (frequency, trend) Fatality or other accidents Lost workday rate Chemical releases OSHA citations (number of citations and type) Workers' compensation claims (trends and amounts) Experience modification rate (both the rate and any changes) Employee turnover rate Number of third-party certifications achieved % of employee training completed vs. expected Inspection Completion Rate Safety Control Implementation Behavior Observations Accident investigation results Behavior or hazard assessments Employee perception surveys Hazard Reporting

19 Functions of Leading and Trailing Indicators
Leading Indicators Reactive Review Goal Setting Learning Results Proactive Predictive Trend Analysis Assessment Tracking

20 Which Indicators are best ?
Trailing Indicators Leading Indicators They are both Valuable, and both are necessary...

21 Implementation Strategy for Indicators 1
Trailers are results – unchangeable / history Start with an intense review of trailing indicators Large company or stand alone plant Become Benchmarks for improvement Year Rec Inj. LTI Fines / Penalties WC Costs 2015 6 2 $16.9K $290K 2014 4 $ 7K $264K 2013 12 7 $ 12K $372K

22 Implementation Strategy for Indicators 2
Year Rec Inj. LTI Fines / Penalties WC Costs 2015 6 2 $16.9K $290K 2014 4 $ 7K $264K 2013 12 7 $ 12K $372K Dig deep Where did the fines come from? Seem to be rising…why What controls are available Dig deep Where and how did ee’s get hurt??? What was the severity What were the circumstances of each?

23 Implementation Strategy for Indicators 3
Based upon former Review…. Analyze where the BU is on each of these… Ask – How can each be improved? Ask - What measures can I put in place? Ask - Will they allow to evaluation? Components Necessary for Safety Success A common Vision Safety System Assertive Leadership Active communication Proactive mindset Compliance with Regulatory (EPA/OSHA) Accountability Engagement and Involvement (all levels) Behavior / Hazard Identification Training and Education Resources Integrated Safety Function Pieces are in place to begin development of leading metrics

24 Once a critical analysis has been completed…
Tools Tools Tools Once a critical analysis has been completed… Tools must be developed prior to setting leading indicators. Employees must be educated to those tools Some form of verification must be developed to track usage

25 Implementation Strategy…Example Options
History / Item Evaluation Potential Leading Indicator (s) High OSHA Bills Very infrequent inspections Training No formal way to know issues are taken care of Number / Quality of internal inspections #/Types of Training provided to EE’s Hazard Identity / Correction Ratio Near Miss and Hazard Reporting Injury # / Severity Over half of injuries are hand related w broken bones Nearly all are related to ee behavior. Behavioral Observations Completed Task Analysis (Developed / Trained) Hazard ID’s Near Miss Reports

26 Pitfalls to Implementation
Individualizing control - everyone must be involved and understand them Too Much Focus on the numbers instead of the activity Not setting expectations for performance. (Work Thru Leadership) Establish goals to achieve that performance. Failure to adapt by not reacting to feedback Under emphasis. Leading Indicators should be a focus Failure to assess ongoing needs./Adapt Develop new goals depending on those emerging needs

27 Example Leading Indicators

28 LEADING INDICATORS

29 Questions, Comments, etc.


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