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Forklift - Accident / Incident Investigation
Rank: Forum user
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Hi All, I am having a real problem attempting to write a procedure for what action to take against forklift drivers when they have an accident i.e when to give a verbal warning, when to give a wriiten warning, when to suspend from drive the truck on either a temp or permanent basis, when to re-train, when to re-test and when and if to substance test. There are just so many variables and I just need a simple procedure for our location managers to follow. I have been at it all weekend and this is my last hope. Does anyone have a simple investigation and outcome procedure that I could use as a starting point? All help and advice, much appreciated. Kind regards Paul
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Rank: Forum user
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Hi Paul, I assume your business has a standard performance and disciplinary process in place? This should already have within it the locally applied sanctions for the various levels of misconduct. Your investigation into an event should identify the level (if any) level of misconduct occurred. Likewise a policy on substance testing should not be focussed at one workgroup but rather the whole company with triggering events (inc random) defined for everyone so that events involving fork trucks get treated proportionately.
I have a one page “fair and just flow chart” to help identify and differentiate errors from wilful behaviour. If you pm you email I can send that over a bit later.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Instead of focusing on what action to take against forklift drivers "when they have an accident", I suggest a focus on what unsafe behaviours there are among forklift drivers in general (either routine bad practices or bad practices from time to time), and identifying why they are happening and how they can be prevented.
If they never sound the horn, for example, there is no point in taking action against those that have an accident when not sounding the horn. Instead you need to get them all to sound the horn.
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1 user thanked Kate for this useful post.
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Rank: Super forum user
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Rather like Kate above, are you simply using discipline rather than action to stop the incidents, albeit you do mention investigation. Have they had training and ignoring it (seriously it goes wrong) or a competency check or even not system on who, when and how the FLT is used (inevitable it goes wrong). As a starter, have we set out the FLT procedures sufficiently along with a suitable and workable environment with appropriate equipment. Is the company after a quick fix for a long term problem, as long term problems often take,a long time to resolve.
i favour the education, example, engineering solutions before enforcement (discipline) in dealing with such situations.
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Rank: Super forum user
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I hope I am misunderstanding this because I find the the idea of an investigation procedure that defines levels of pubishment of people involved in an accident highly problematic. The role of investigation is to collect evidence to explain what happened. This is analysed to identify why, focussed on root causes. Only people who are reckless or had malicious intent should be subject to discipline; and that is very rare.
If you are punishing a driver for having an accident you need to also consider punishing their supervisor, trainer, the people who laid out the workplace, the site manager who oversaw all of these arrangements, the safety advisor etc. etc.
But hopefully I have misunderstood.
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1 user thanked andybz for this useful post.
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Rank: Forum user
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I agree. The disciplinary process is NOT part of the investigation process. Findings of an investigation can inform managers in their enactment of discipline in the rare event that genuinely wilful behaviour is found, but even then issues of mitigating circumstances and other issues specifically relating to personal factors cannot be overidden by an incident investigation finding. Applying the principles of a "fair and just culture" will help, hopefully. Trying to apply blanket responses to events (particularly blaming the driver solely) will likely destroy trust and drive issues underground.
What have the investigations to previous truck related events found? What have the investigations into nontruck related incidents found?
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Rank: Forum user
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Thanks all, but I am not talking about our safety culture overall. I am simple looking for a straightforward approach for our location managers to follow after and accident has occurred and if the forklift driver was found to be at fault, then the action that they should take on a sliding scale. I could not agree more with all of the vauled feedback received and it is appreacited, but the difficulty that I am having is the correct course of action that managers should follow when things do go wrong as a result of the driver's error i.e verbal or written warning, re-training, re-testing or suspension from driving duties and making sure that they are appropiate to the situation. Kind regards, Paul
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Rank: Super forum user
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So speaking hypothetically a driver has an accident - the ideal solution is to suspend them from driving until an investigation and/or corrective actions e.g. re-training have taken place.
It transpires they are the only driver currently available for the site meaning the business stops until alternative arrangements can be made e.g. transferring a driver from another site or hiring a temporary driver. We know safety comes first but against commercial reality you will end up with a split between the idealised documented activity and reality. Your company made them location manager - they have sight of the daily variables your proposed document would not. I have seen documents similar to what you are seeking the trouble is as a remote hands off they set blanket rules which may not suit the nuiances of different locations e.g. not wearing a seat belt mandated as a written warning (if the site is flat as a pancake, vehicles are not travelling at speed in a controlled segregated area what purpose does the belt serve?). captcha BE4R
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Rank: Super forum user
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So speaking hypothetically a driver has an accident - the ideal solution is to suspend them from driving until an investigation and/or corrective actions e.g. re-training have taken place.
It transpires they are the only driver currently available for the site meaning the business stops until alternative arrangements can be made e.g. transferring a driver from another site or hiring a temporary driver. We know safety comes first but against commercial reality you will end up with a split between the idealised documented activity and reality. Your company made them location manager - they have sight of the daily variables your proposed document would not. I have seen documents similar to what you are seeking the trouble is as a remote hands off they set blanket rules which may not suit the nuiances of different locations e.g. not wearing a seat belt mandated as a written warning (if the site is flat as a pancake, vehicles are not travelling at speed in a controlled segregated area what purpose does the belt serve?). captcha BE4R
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Rank: Super forum user
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around 10+ years ago I wrote a series of guidance notes and training sessions on investigation and not necssarily lines of dicipline but certainly having a view on the outcome of the investigation and the severity - based on the investigation a risk assessment process for the event....funnily enough it aligned with the 5 discipline steps...from deliberate acts (high - gross misconduct/ potential dismissal)...it was successfully tested at tribunal...however it is probelematic...your investigation has to be 100% with no gaps in knowledge of the investigator etc...in hindsight I probably would let HR lead it and only supply technical support...biggest problem is that uless you have HR onboard at the very begginging they will cave when it comes to the crunch..
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