In my professional OHS consulting
practice I often see clients who have become frustrated by "chasing the
regulations." Their desire to comply with the legal requirements is
honourable and a very wise business choice. It also pays to make our workplaces
safe and healthy for our valuable employees. This is especially true in our day
and age of diminishing workforce, increased world competition and challenging
economic times. A contracting company needs to stay sharp to survive.
Wanting to have a safe
work method statements and to comply isn't enough; we need a strategy to
make it happen. Here's what's worked successfully for many who realize that
making it safe is only half of the challenge and making it legal is the second
half.
Trouble is in almost all
jurisdictions that I'm aware of, this act of driving through an intersection
against a red light is not legal. Our goal in business is to do both.
Let's start with a simple process.
1) Find the harmful energies (Hazard
Assessment)
Find the harmful energies that could
cause you grief. Electrical, mechanical, chemical, kinetic, gravitational and
stored energies are some examples of energies that can all find a pathway to us
unless we ensure they are controlled. Being hit with unwanted energy is a sure
fire way to get hurt or damage our equipment.
2) Put barriers in place to stop the
harmful energies (Hazard Control)
Once defined, these energies can be eliminated
or in some cases you can put barriers in place to ensure the energies don't hit
us. For example, if I need to work in a trench, I'm concerned about gravity
working on the stored energy of the trench walls. If I go into an
un-shored/protected trench then I'm putting myself in the way of energy. I can
control that energy by barriers. These barriers don't have to be physical
barriers. I can use the barrier of my knowledge not to enter the trench. I can
also get training to know how to build safe shoring. Shoring is a great example
of a barrier that effectively protects us from harmful energy. I can also use a
trench cage to ensure that if the walls of the trench do collapse that I'm
safely inside the cage unharmed by the release of the potentially harmful
energy.
3) Check the applicable legislation
for details of the prescribed hazard controls.
So once I've looked at either
eliminating the harmful energies or the barriers I can put in place, I will
probably have made it "safe". To follow our trenching example I could
decide to shore the trench with lumber and screw-jacks. This could keep me safe
from cave-in. I could guess the size of lumber I need and the number of
screw-jacks but I could guess wrong. My shoring design may keep the walls of
the trench from moving in on me, but may not meet the requirements of the local
OHS laws. This is where I need to go to the web to check the regulations or
look it up in my OHS regulation/code book.
4) Check your industry for best
practices.
In my research I should also look for
industry solutions to my safety challenges. Why re-invent a trench cage when I
can just go buy or rent one? What are others doing to make it both safe and
legal? Industry associations focused on safety are great sources of solutions
to my safety challenges. Use them relentlessly.
5) Develop the safe work process to
be used.
Now that I've decided on how I'm
going to do the work, I need to develop a work process so that when I do this
kind of work, I and my fellow workers are protected by the process used.
6) Educate and train those who need
to comply with the work process.
We all need to know what is expected
of us and we should be trained to do the work we're assigned. Learning how to
shore using the company procedure is a barrier to me and my fellow workers from
being injured or killed in a trench cave-in.
7) Observe that the work process is
being followed.
Now that we have a plan to enter
trenches we need to make sure that we always do it safely, Workplace
inspections and observations tell us that we're doing it right. The old quality
adage "Say what you do, do what you say and measure often" works
really well in safety. Not only will you be ensuring you are following your own
rules, but you will be meeting the legal requirements.
When we do it right we need to tell
everyone that they've done a great job! If we need to adjust our processes, now
is the time to do our improvements. Well there we have it, a simple process to
make it safe...and to make it legal. Hopefully this will reduce any frustration
you have around meeting the details of the OHS
management plan regulations. Don't miss a step, your employees and your
company's well-being is relying on it!
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