Strengthening Jobsite Safety Climate
When workers and management value safety, we see fewer hazardous work practices on the jobsite. But are we doing all we can to make that happen? If a superintendent starts with a safety talk in the morning, but focuses only on production the rest of the day, foremen and workers may start to think cutting corners on safety to get the job done is OK. A good safety climate requires integrating safety concerns into every aspect of a firm's operations.
This is why Â鶹ÊÓƵ has published a new workbook, Strengthening Jobsite Safety Climate. Each worksheet contains a quick self-assessment for leading indicators of safety climate. This is followed by a list of ideas that owners, contractors, safety directors and supervisory staff can implement to evaluate and improve their safety climate. The ideas range from including safety in company mission statements and holding daily huddles to using suggestion boxes on the jobsite and implementing near-miss reporting systems.
The early reviews from contractors have been outstanding. "These worksheets are a great, easy-to-use audit of your safety program," says Paul A. Amedee, CSP, Vice President of EHS at Safway Group, the national scaffold and access powerhouse. "I've assigned all my EHS professionals in the U.S. and Canada to evaluate our safety climate using the workbook - identifying which best practices we already use in our organization, and which we don't. We are going to use the results in a gap analysis to look for ways to enhance our efforts."
Strengthening Jobsite Safety Climate is available for download on the Â鶹ÊÓƵ website, and print editions are available while supplies last by contacting news@cpwr.com.
Pete Stafford
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Â鶹ÊÓƵ IN PRINTRecently Published Journal Articles by Â鶹ÊÓƵ Scholars
Ann Marie Dale, Daniel Ryan, Laura Welch, Margaret A Olsen, Bryan Buchholz, Bradley Evanoff. Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Sept 2014 (published online ahead of print).
Jamie McGaha, Kim Miller, Alexis Descatha, Laurie Welch, Bryan Buchholz, Bradley Evanoff, Ann Marie Dale. Applied Ergonomics, July 2014.
. Xiuwen Dong, Julie Largay, Xuanwen Wang, and Janice Windau. Monthly Labor Review, July 2014.
Xiuwen Sue Dong, Knut Ringen, Laura Welch, and John Dement American Journal of Industrial Medicine, June 2014 (published online ahead of print).
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ONLINE RESOURCES
Find the latest on regulatory efforts and Create-A-Plan to control exposures at -- a one-stop source of information on how to prevent a silica hazard and protect workers
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Visit Â鶹ÊÓƵ for information on our training programs, research findings, and resources for your health and safety or research initiatives
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Concrete Contractor, 9/16/2014
ISHN Magazine, 8/21/2014
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ABOUT US Â鶹ÊÓƵ -- Â鶹ÊÓƵ is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization created by the Building and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO. Working with partners like you in business, labor, government, and the universities, we strive every day to make work safer for the 9 million men and women who work in the U.S. construction industry!
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