Posted By Glyn Atkinson
From apprenticeship days in 1970 onwards, working for a major fertilizer factory at Immingham, in Lincolnshire, the watchword was always - work safely, this plant can bite you! Wear your PPE at all times - it becomes second nature then.
Coming out of my time - Flixborough happened- thirty miles away, and the shock wave hit a huge shop window and deflected nearly nine inches in the centre before shattering, luckily no one was anywhere near it !
Then , years of contracting at various firms, years of working to BS and ISO standards, calibrating instrumentation, and working in intrinsically safe environments on explosion proof zoned equipment.
Then, one day - the 60 watt light bulb lit up, in the shape of John Gilbertson of Key, Health and Safety.
Safety information to a fledgling workshop safety representative in a clear, concise, understandable manner and like the Christians who discover God in a flash.... I was bitten by the bug to learn more.... and to try to become someone working in a similar style.
Cast off those overalls before you're 45 and go for the safety career - you're not stupid, just need the rest of a practical education in certain areas to enhance your current knowledge!
Less than seven years and several safety courses and exams later, here I am at Chartered status, amongst the professionals, letters behind my name, proud of my achievements, and earning far more than in a dead end trade job... actually valued for what I produce each day, and on first name terms with the local HSE inspector, working with, not fighting against them, hopefully to make the right decision or choice to prevent accidents or incidents, but knowing that help in many technical forms is to hand for situations where I am not the "know it all ".
Am I still learning?.... of course, because health and safety is brilliant in theory until people are introduced into the equation.
The degree with no experience of working life and reactions of the working populace is an empty qualification , in my very humble opinion.
You need to equate problems with viable solutions to try and save that director's pound, and enhance a safe working environment for the shop floor. That's where the "life experience" comes into practical play and ideas from previous employments can be used or doctored to suit the present situation to resolve your current problem.
Your past helps the present and shapes your future, use all experiences and move forward, learning more as you go!