Follow this recipe for a great safety committee
A safety committee consists of management and worker representatives who identify and reduce or eliminate safety hazards and promote safety and health awareness. They can play a significant role in the safety structure. An active and effective committee can significantly improve safety by instituting programs and providing the support that helps to reduce accidents, injuries, and illnesses at your job by:
- Providing a forum for problem-solving;
- Providing workers, supervisors, and managers with a resource to turn to when they face safety problems;
- Getting workers working together;
- Involving more workers in overall jobsite safety and health management;
- Providing workers with a broader base of safety knowledge; and
- Preventing “safety burnout” because safety won’t fall on the shoulders of just one or two workers.
Simply having a safety committee doesn’t guarantee these benefits, however. The committee must be focused, and it must use three key elements to be a success.
The three I’s
Investigations, inspections, and involvement are three keys to having a successful safety committee.
- Investigations — No matter how conscientious the safety effort, incidents may occasionally happen due to all sorts of factors. Incidents can include injuries, illnesses, property damage, or near misses. A safety committee typically does a thorough and proper incident investigation and follow-up. The emphasis of the investigation should NOT be fault-finding.
- Inspections — A committee may also conduct jobsite inspections regularly. The inspection team will document the inspection date and the location. They will identify hazards or potential hazards and describe any recommendations for correcting them.
- Involvement — Workers should be involved. If they are not a committee member, they may attend safety training, report safety hazards, and submit safety suggestions to the safety committee.
OSHA requirements
Federal OSHA doesn’t require safety committees. It’s worth noting that some state-OSHA plans require or strongly encourage a safety committee’s formation. Check with your state occupational safety and health office for more information.