Welcome Guest! The IOSH forums are a free resource to both members and non-members. Login or register to use them

Postings made by forum users are personal opinions. IOSH is not responsible for the content or accuracy of any of the information contained in forum postings. Please carefully consider any advice you receive.

Notification

Icon
Error

Options
Go to last post Go to first unread
hoosier  
#1 Posted : 13 August 2013 13:13:55(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

After recent process safety disasters, it may be time to review our current knowledge of safety culture. What do you think and what more needs to be done?
RayRapp  
#2 Posted : 13 August 2013 14:09:27(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

Maybe you should remind us of these recent process safety disasters?
hoosier  
#3 Posted : 13 August 2013 22:49:58(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Heres a few to be going on with: Location: Belle, WV Date: 01/23/2010 Accident Type: Toxic Chemical Release Result: One fatality Fatal Hotwork Explosion Location: Buffalo, NY Date: 11/09/2010 Accident Type: Hot Work - Explosion and Fire Result: Hot welding sparks ignited flammable vapors inside a 10,000 Gallon tank Fatal Carbide Industries Fire and Explosion Location: Louisville, KY Date: 03/21/2011 Accident Type: Combustible Dust Explosion and Fire Result: Two workers killed and two others injured Fatal Fireworks Disassembly Explosion and Fire  Location: Waikele, HI Date: 04/08/2011 Accident Type: Combustible Dust Explosion and Fire Result: Five workers killed resulting from unsafe disposal practices; Location: Gallatin, TN Date: 01/31/2011 Accident Type: Combustible Dust Explosion and Fire Result: Fatal injuries to five workers Location: Okuma, Fukushima, Japan Date: March 11, 2011 Accident Type: Nuclear meltdown and release of radioactive materials Result: Catasrophe Location: Bonga, Nigeria Date: December 24, 2011 Accident Type: Oil Spill Result: Environmental Disaster Location: Marl, Germany Accident Occurred on: March 31, 2012 Accident Type: Chemical Explosion Company: Two workers killed Location: Savar, Bangladesh, India Date: November 2012 Accident Type: Fire Result: More than 100 people died Location: Birmingham UK Accident Occurred on: Nov. 26, 2012 Accident Type: Distillery Explosion Result: Storage Tanks Destroyed Location: North-West Spanish region of Galicia Date: July 25, 2013 Accident Type: Train Derailment Result: 78 people killed and more than 140 injured
JJ Prendergast  
#4 Posted : 14 August 2013 08:22:29(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
JJ Prendergast

I wouldn't call a train crash a 'process industry' accident. Savar, India - lack of detail - process industry or general factory fire?? The American accidents - say no more, in my experience - lower safety standards than Europe/UK. If it isn't in 'the code' they won't do something to improve safety. Nigerian oil leak - genuine leak or the locals trying to steal product?
walker  
#5 Posted : 14 August 2013 08:35:18(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

JJ Prendergast wrote:
The American accidents - say no more, in my experience - lower safety standards than Europe/UK. If it isn't in 'the code' they won't do something to improve safety.
I'd agree, big business & profits trumps worker deaths If the "Posh boys" get their own way we will have a system that is very similar.
allanwood  
#6 Posted : 14 August 2013 08:37:02(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
allanwood

Buncefiled? Cash is king in the working environment - or prove to me otherwise!
walker  
#7 Posted : 14 August 2013 08:42:39(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

allanwood wrote:
Buncefiled? Cash is king in the working environment - or prove to me otherwise!
Quite correct but part of the problem at Buncefield was the depot was encroached on all sides due to poor LA planning approvals. I remember the time when that site was highly isolated. BP live just down the road (from Buncefield)- but only a few years later they had two similar events in the states - no learning there!
hoosier  
#8 Posted : 14 August 2013 09:28:16(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

So does that mean you all don't think that Safety Culture is an issue, and that all is well with current approaches?
KieranD  
#9 Posted : 14 August 2013 09:40:37(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

Hoosier, to my knowledge. two approaches to 'safety culture' predominate: a. 'behavioural safety', based on principles of positive and negative reinforcement, which has been usefully championed in the UK by Dom Cooper b. 'Just culture' based on macro- ergonomic principles of avoiding 'latent' error in design of work and on managing the organisational narrative about safety which has been usefully championed in the UK by Tim Marsh While they're both systemic, they are problematic due to their partitioning 'safety culture' from the broader culture of an organisation, which in practice is not sustainable. As a simple example, note how enquiries on this discussion forum about stress are responded to - as if stress, healthy or otherwise, is not an everyday symptom of organisational culture and the values-in-action of an organisation. As far as I can establish the most innovative approach to culture at work, including 'safety culture', is emerging from 'social identity' research which is as broad as social psychology applied to many domains of human behaviour including education, medical care and community development and conflict. The only application of social identity theory (SIT) to safety that I've been able to find is a report in the June issue of Human Factors by 3 New Zealanders. Like other safety professionals in the UK, I've got to apply SIT to culture leadership myself, which 've at last I've succeeded in doing.
JJ Prendergast  
#10 Posted : 14 August 2013 09:55:07(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
JJ Prendergast

SImply providing a list of brief details of accidents doesn't say much about an organisations safety culture. The root causes of the accidents needs to be understood, before passing comment on possible safety culture implications.
hoosier  
#11 Posted : 14 August 2013 10:09:27(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Thank You Keiran! Could you explain how SIT can link the Behavioural Safety and Just Culture approaches to organisational culture. Sounds useful. JJ in my view the details of each incident is unnecessary to comment of the concept of safety culture, what approaches are advocated to develop/enhance safety culture, and what might be wrong with them (if at all).
walker  
#12 Posted : 14 August 2013 10:25:54(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

Maintaining a culture is damn difficult. Our problem (as companies and nationally) is we don't learn from past mistakes or retain a memory of them. The posh boys ( and I include labour leaders in this) were not around to see Abervan (SP?) Flixborough Piper alpha etc Likewise every 5 years my company have a flush of new shiny faced managers who don't appreciate systems were developed to eliminate past incidents and can't understand why we spend so much time on safety awareness and positive culture development.
RayRapp  
#13 Posted : 14 August 2013 10:43:43(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

I am surprised that Deepwater Horizon did not make the charts. Now, if ever there was a cultural presence I guess this was it - the macho culture of oil and gas compounded by the ever increasing need to drill deeper for profit, pushing the technological boundaries to the limit; at the expense of safety. Cultural factors cover a huge array of underlying factors, including the regulators blaise attitude to enforcement and the incumbent government's attitude towards regulation, as well both latent and active failures. Where does culture start and end?
KieranD  
#14 Posted : 14 August 2013 13:08:05(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

Hoosier SIT is really an alternative to Behavioural Safety and 'Just Culture' paradigms as it starts on quite different assumptions and skills of intervention. Here goes my lunch break while I briefly out it..... Social Identity Theory (SIT) emerged from the research and personal experience of management of risks in social interactions of Henri Tajfel, a Polish immigrant to the UK activitist in rehabilitation of refugees after WWII. His insights into gaps between the ‘theory’ and practical applications of SIT were enlarged on by an Anglo-Australian psychologist, John Turner, whose early work experience included phases of exposure to hazardous experiences on construction sites. While Tajfel’s social experimental research underscored how arbitrarily people in groups created insider-outsider boundaries, Turner introduced the concepts of ‘self-categorisation’ and ‘social categorisation’ to account for results of experiments into the management of group boundaries. In the wake of these pioneers, scholars mainly in the UK, the Netherlands and Australia have tested out additional SIT concepts in educational, community and work contexts highlighted ways in which stereotyping and bias create barriers in ways that some regard as ‘natural’ while others regard as ‘unacceptable’ (sometimes phrased with less refinement). In practice, decisions about work performance and productivity, safety, quality, waste as well as dispute and negotiation management emerge from how individuals and groups conduct self-categorisation and social categorisation at different levels of identity: the personal level, the social (and intricate) level, human level and animal level. Safety cuts across all four levels and is particularly intricate at the social level in relation to organisational identities. Against this background, a culture about ‘safety’ hinges on the reality data a groups use to represent the world of work in which they operate. A simple examples from my experience may indicate how safety culture emerges from process of self-characterisation and social categorisation. In a relatively small family-owned distribution firm, an employee (Z) acted with some anger when she found that she was suffering from painful symptoms of musculo-skeletal disorders attributable to the data input machine she was using at work (at the animal level of self-characterisation); although they had not previously given the matter any thought, the owner-managers (D & A) accepted her account as a fact, especially as a colleague also reported experience similar symptoms. At the human level of categorisation, both Z and D & A professed the belief that the employer should fulfil any legal obligations arising from their employment relationship, including an obligation to provide para-medical help free of charge to Z, time necessary to recuperate and actions to prevent a recurrence. At the social level, there did not appear to be much scope for the company to offer Z an alternative way to carry out data input tasks but she expressed an interest in working in a telephone sales role. At the social level, only D and A had the authority to make any decisions about investing in resources and training to make this method of controlling risk possible. At the personal l level, the employee was very scared lest her injury should present a barrier to aspiration to move on to train to work with handicapped children, building on her degree in textile design. At this level, D & A respected her ambition as reasonable At this level, both parties also professed strong beliefs as members of fundamentalist Christian churches. The critical task for me was to persuade Z to speak to D & A calmly; once this was achieved, they exercised their authority (and processes of categorisation) to bring forward a decision to invest in a new telephone system and to train Z in a role as a sales telephone operator. A culture of ‘a safe behaviour’ in this instance required moving Z from using equipment likely to contribute to recurrence of musculoskeletal injury. Norms of a ‘just’ culture was central to the self-categorisation and social categorisation of all members of the firm. Within the SIT framework, my own contribution lay in my own use of categorisation processes to avoid stereotyping D & Z as proprietors by dwelling on the failures in compliance with the DSE Regs, the COSHH Regs, The Equality Act 2010 and the Employment Act 1996. It would take me the afternoon to outline deviations from the above model, for the processes of distorted self-categorisation, social categorisation and stereotyping can result in such complex mental, emotional, behaviour and political deadlocks and conflicts. Yet sometimes even these are prised open with careful listening, observation, social experiments and cautious feedback, at times in funny (in both senses) ways. Where SIT scores in how it supports skilful design of social experiments based on substantial research about motivation, communication, group behaviour and safety leadership at work. If you wish to receive specific references to read about SIT, you're welcome to PM me.
peter gotch  
#15 Posted : 14 August 2013 13:14:29(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

JJ - I'd certainly call the Canadian train incident a process accident. Amongst other issues, it's reopened a debate as to whether oil (or other hazardous chemicals) should be transported by rail or pipeline. ...and as regards the Spanish crash, similar principles apply to rail safety as to chemical industry safety investments - already the train protection systems have been upgraded at the site of the accident, with similar upgrades planned for other parts of the Spanish rail network. Walker - unless changed over the last couple of years if you search OSHA and EU-OSHA websites for Buncefield - nil return. So not that surprising that a virtual Buncefield look alike occurred at US run depot in Puerto Rico 9 months later - no serious injuries but another major environmental disaster. I flew to Ukraine the day after Buncefield - headline news on Ukraine TV - but does short term memory result in lessons being learnt nationally or internationally a few years hence? Hoosier. There were three explosions in less than 2 weeks at BP Grangemouth, Scotland in 2000. Health & Safety Executive investigation led by Alistair McNab. Alistair was seconded to the US Chemical Safety Board investigation team after Texas City 2005. I've since listened to him commenting that he could almost have tippexed out date and place of 2000 incidents and inserted Texas City, March 2005 - there were multiple common root causes. CSB and Baker reports into TX concluded amongst other things that BP had lost focus on process safety at the expense of day to day personal safety. Not the first time an investigation team has come to this conclusion (including in relation to some Network Rail disasters) and it won't be the last. Hoosier
malcarleton  
#16 Posted : 14 August 2013 19:04:54(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
malcarleton

For what its worth and regardless of the failures that were quoted by the original poster, I don't believe that "Safety Culture" is something that should be "Re-Visited" my view is that it is a constant within our job. My Prime Contractor has a Safety Maturity Matrix which goes from level 1 (Really don't think too hard about safety issues) to level 5 Exemplar (Safety is just the way we do things) You've heard all the buzz words and hype I'm sure, but its a real issue, the last stage in level 5 is the companies "Safety Culture" because it is the most difficult and elusive to achieve, that's the level where you have to change peoples attitudes and behaviors. I'm not an expert in behavioral safety but I know enough to realize that its the Utopian Dream of the safety fraternity, difficult if not impossible to attain, but that's no reason to give up.
hoosier  
#17 Posted : 15 August 2013 08:51:26(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Walker: You make some good points about organizational memory. Is this where a depository on "Lessons Learned" within a company could help? Kieran: What you posit sounds interesting, and seems to primarily address an aspect of "Safety communications", but I admit I am struggling to think about how companies could apply the approach across their entire operations. RayRap: The high profile PS disasters are well known to all, hence deliberately not mentioning them (and I am highly familiar with the various root causes involved in many of them). Rather, I was seeking to show that there are still many "smaller scale" (and not so small) incidents that tend to go under the radar, but collectively probably kill more people than those that make international headlines. In other words, Process Safety Incidents and personal injury incidents rumble on and on and on and ...... So my question was geared up to asking what components of safety culture are we missing. Currently research and practice tell us we should be looking at safety leadership, safety communications, developing a 'just & Fair' culture, developing people's safety competencies, engaging employees to create a 'safety partnership', measuring KPI's, conducting incident investigations, sharing lessons learned, fixing corrective actions, managing contractor safety, and so on, with periodic "Maturity Assessments" as described by Malcarleton above (Whose comments I highly agree with). So, in regards to the concept of safety culture: [a] is it that we are focusing on the wrong topics? [b] is it all to do with poor 'execution" by safety professionals and others or [c] a mix of both?
KieranD  
#18 Posted : 15 August 2013 09:29:57(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

Hoosier The topic omitted from research and constructive discussions about working safely is a very simple yet greatly neglected five-letter one, namely 'power'. While this extends to 'communications', it is far, far, far bigger than that. A very simple way in which some companies abuse their power consists in demonstrably false communications about 'safety as our main value' As a simple test, ask a group of 10 senior managers to tell you up to three messages on the safety noticeboard displayed in a prominent location on their site, which many will physically pass at least once a day. How much do you want to bet that you'll get more than one valid response?
imwaldra  
#19 Posted : 15 August 2013 10:05:24(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
imwaldra

Hoosier (Dominic), Thanks for starting a useful thread, lots of interesting comments. But I suggest you've provided a pretty good response to your original question at the end of your last posting above. Poor execution by organisations is usually because, within any one site or facility, large 'process safety' incidents are pretty rare (I suggest 'system safety' is a better phrase for these high consequence-low probability events, as it's then clear that the root causes are largely common for chemical, rail, air, nuclear, underground mining, marine and oil/gas reservoir events). Because of this rarity, it's a real challenge to convince a poorly performing organisation of the need to change - they can continue 'fat and happy' for a long time before disaster strikes. But of course there is poor execution by OSH professionals too, who concentrate on the wrong topics because they don't understand the multi-pronged and balanced approach needed for major hazards as summarised in the last-but-one para of your posting above. One requirement you don't mention there is the need for 'chronic unease' - that was a major theme in the recent excellent Piper25 conference in Aberdeen. There's a summary of that via links from the IOSH Offshore and HI Group websites with further links to all the presentations. The conference itself demonstrated many outstanding examples of good safety culture, but it's not easy to share those unless you were there. But I recommend viewing the presentations, especially the keynote ones, for those who wish to extend their practical understanding in this area of culture.
hilary  
#20 Posted : 15 August 2013 10:09:41(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
hilary

As it just so happened, I wrote and delivered a 4 hour course yesterday at work (trial run for EHS reps critique) on Safety Culture and why we do what we do at our place of work. I covered DWH because it was mahoosive and also the Challenger and Columbia disasters because they showed a complete lack of learning by the people who really should be the safest and most technically competent people in the world. It is designed for newbies to introduce them to the way in which we work, but also for those people in the "I've been doing this job for 35 years and I've never had an accident" brigade who although they don't work unsafely (we have an excellent safety record), don't really embrace the principles wholeheartedly and keep failing their training (as EHS sign off is a necessary and integral part of all competencies). So should we revisit the concept of safety culture? Yes - all the time and endlessly so that standards don't slip and we don't become complacent.
hoosier  
#21 Posted : 15 August 2013 10:52:28(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Hi Ian: No fooling you is there. Thought I would be flying under the radar for a bit longer! Please could you provide the links to the conference papers you mentioned (looked but could not find). Chronic unease is certainly a major issue not overly emphasized in previous safety culture work. Kieran: I thought "Power" was being addressed via the "Just and Fair" Culture piece, though it would be really interesting to know how many companies are actively trying to develop such a culture. Hilary: Nice comment about constantly re-visiting
KieranD  
#22 Posted : 15 August 2013 11:00:40(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

Hoosier 21st century Social Identity research has a far more radical approach to power at work than the Just Culture. For example, Wisse and van Knippenberg, 'Power and self-construal. How the self affects power processes', (in Tjosvold and Wisse, Power and Interdependence in Organizations, Routledge, 2009) emphasise how much organisations fail to validly measure how candidates for all level of leadership, not least at senior levels, are assessed in terms of their behaviour use of power.
hoosier  
#23 Posted : 15 August 2013 11:34:52(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Hi Kieran: Thanks for the references. Will try to look those up. In return, for anyone who wants a useful safety culture strategy, with practical tools and practical ways forward, might want to download a document (which I freely confess does not really tackle Chronic Unease - good point Ian) from http://www.behavioral-sa...-resource-center/level-2
RayRapp  
#24 Posted : 15 August 2013 12:02:04(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

I agree an interesting debate, albeit a long and winding road. The complex issues associated with multi-causality (safety culture) is varied, a bit like a safety climate survey - it's only a snapshot in time. Whilst their is a potential for human and component failure there will be adverse events. Despite a plethora of information on behavioural safety no one has managed to prevent human error - to err is to be human. Only through better design and technology can we reduce the impact of human error. Until then it is a matter of - Human Error or Last line of Defence?
hoosier  
#25 Posted : 15 August 2013 12:50:19(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Hi Rayrapp. Human Error stems from some of the Safety Culture topics discussed earlier, as well as design/technology. The document I pointed to earlier addresses human error in a practical way. Alcoa has been tackling it with the guys very successfully across their facilities.
walker  
#26 Posted : 15 August 2013 13:03:27(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

Hoosier & Imwaldra - come on! Stop snigggering between yourselves, what's the joke? I have my suspicions and if I'm right my plan ( almost did this yesterday!) to alerting Hoosier to "Improving Safety Culture" by a certain Dr Cooper would have been rather pointless.
hilary  
#27 Posted : 15 August 2013 13:10:28(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
hilary

I see where you are coming from Walker ..... :(
walker  
#28 Posted : 15 August 2013 13:20:07(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

hoosier wrote:
Hi Kieran: Thanks for the references. Will try to look those up. In return, for anyone who wants a useful safety culture strategy, with practical tools and practical ways forward, might want to download a document (which I freely confess does not really tackle Chronic Unease - good point Ian) from http://www.behavioral-sa...-resource-center/level-2
Thanks Just downloaded that Will read and hopefully generate some CPD points in passing I wonder if it will join my often referenced copy of Improving Safety culture
hoosier  
#29 Posted : 15 August 2013 13:41:03(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Hi Walker. I would have appreciated your assistance regardless. Ian knew it was me straightaway - he has great insights and wisdom on many things -I thought Kieran knew also. Anyhow "Hooiser' is what they call people who live in the State of Indiana in the US. It seemed an apt name to use for the IOSH forum when I first moved to Indiana back in 2001. The link to the documents referred to by Ian is: http://www.oilandgasuk.c...iper25/Presentations.cfm
walker  
#30 Posted : 15 August 2013 14:05:02(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

Well it resulted in a good discussion.............. and a book to read. You were someone who insprired me to move into general H&S (from product safety) some 25 years ago after I attended a training course you ran. I have (only) 2 books on my desk - Improving etc and Tim Marsh's Affective Safety Management
hoosier  
#31 Posted : 16 August 2013 03:02:10(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Hi Walker. I hope your move to H&S has been edifying, but your comment makes everything I have done over the past couple of decades worthwhile. It has also been good to be on the forum and discuss things with old friends. Enjoy the read, and as they say "to use it is to make it useful"!
RayRapp  
#32 Posted : 16 August 2013 09:49:30(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

Back to the original question from Hoosier, Dominic, or whatever - do we need to re-visit the concept of safety culture? No, I don't think it has ever been unequivocally defined. To what extent cultural factors influence incidents or incidents influence the culture is a moot point. However I do think that we need to review where we are as an industry. There have been far too many initiatives which have been introduced which add little value, indeed, some have had a negative effect IMO. As practitioners we need to get smarter by challenging some of these beguiling practices - decisions made in Boardrooms without understanding the impact on the shop floor.
hoosier  
#33 Posted : 16 August 2013 14:25:27(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
hoosier

Hi Rayrapp You are right, there are a multitude of definitions, but all boil down to the way people think and behave. I am very interested to know what initiatives have been introduced that have added little value, or had a negative effect. Even more interesting to discover why these have not worked.
pete48  
#34 Posted : 16 August 2013 19:48:03(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
pete48

Q. “It may be time to review our current knowledge of safety culture. What do you think and what more needs to be done?” I am not sure whether the review should be of our current knowledge or the application of “safety culture”. If my memory serves me correctly this term became more common in the UK during the mid eighties when organisations were beginning to look for ways to include human behaviour into main stream management of OSH as well as other areas of management. It was then later placed into UK culture by the HSE. The principle was to recognise that organisations, like equipment, will inevitably/eventually fail and that without reference to human behaviour any attempt to reduce or prevent recurrences would never be successful. I remember the emphasis placed at the time on the fact that it was never a standalone tool but one part of a much bigger picture. All well and good to begin with but one might argue that there is a paradox, a quarter of a century later, in still wishing to separately identify a safety culture from an organisational culture. Does it result in re-inforcing the perception that OSH is somehow an added extra? How often does it result in attempts to impose a culture across a conflicting and stronger organisational culture? Reported experience would suggest that it does in many cases and, of course, fails as a result. If we seek truly integrated management then it is the organisational culture, of whcih OSH is a part, that has to be managed. I don’t doubt that the importance of understanding human behaviour and the underpinning sciences are as valid today as they have ever been but the continued use of “a safety culture” as something to be learnt and practised is beyond its sell by date. Moreover, the continued insistence that there is something called a safety culture limits our ability as OSH professionals to interact with and help to define organisational cultures. So is it time to move beyond using the term ‘safety culture’? Are OSH professionals now better educated and informed about the principles in order for them to be able to focus more on the underpinning science and leave behind this poor descriptor? Many of us have successfully achieved this. I guess the better examples might be where Quality, HR and OSH have combined in identifying and improving culture within an organisation. The current situation in the UK with HMG taking a counter culture stance also provides some good indicators of the dangers of relying on or placing too much trust in the benefit of a "safety culture".
RayRapp  
#35 Posted : 17 August 2013 09:47:59(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

quote=hoosier]Hi Rayrapp You are right, there are a multitude of definitions, but all boil down to the way people think and behave. I am very interested to know what initiatives have been introduced that have added little value, or had a negative effect. Even more interesting to discover why these have not worked.
Dominic There are many examples which have blighted industry in some shape or form. So I will give you a flavour of a short paper I have just written highlighting these practices and if you PM me with your email address I will be happy to send you a copy. Meanwhile, mandatory PPE - many industries have adopted this initiative above and beyond what would normally be expected, sometimes mandated by corporate clients, either way it is a lazy and unprofessional way to deal with the potential risks from hazards which should be risk assessed - not mandated from the Boardroom. For example, in my own industry railways, operatives must wear full orange (hi-vis trousers and top) hard hat, light eye protection and gloves (not all contractors insist on these but most do) steel capped safety boots. Many organisations ban the wearing of short sleeve shirts as well to protect these poor souls from sun burn. All this PPE required regardless of whether you are working trackside or not, whether it's hot...and so on. Health and safety loses respect when we cotton wool people for no good reason. As an industry I believe we need a louder voice to speak out where we feel practices have gone OTT.
boblewis  
#36 Posted : 17 August 2013 22:57:10(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

At the end of the day one can describe cultures in general terms much as Friere did many years ago Banking - Tell everyone what they must do Independent - Tell people why they must do things Conscientised - people relate to each other and make decisions concerning actions and their effects We are all still in the second except for some exceptons for some periods of their history ie Dupont, BP and some of the petrochem giants
Users browsing this topic
Guest
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.