Start the year off in the right direction
For some reason, the big, complex things on jobsites seem to come together without issues or with little effort. It’s the little things at jobsites that tend to lag for one reason or another. No, not just that the coffee machine is empty, or someone brought the wrong types of donuts. At the start of the year, many of my peers were laser-focused on world-changing things to supercharge their safety culture into the new year. By the end of the year, they were back to the basics without ever creating the world-class culture that was on their list of New Year’s resolutions. Well, a house built on a weak foundation will eventually fail. Shouldn’t a safety culture be built on a solid foundation too?
I remember jumping on the bandwagon for many years, chasing the world-class culture dream until a President in the company asked me if I knew what one looked like. I hadn’t thought about it. I was almost offended when he asked me; I just knew I wanted to build one. It was the new safety buzzword after safety managers stopped calling safety a priority and began calling it a value instead. Priorities change, and values don’t. I figured the words themselves were enough for workers to figure out what I meant. I attempted to explain it to the President and think I described the Starship Enterprise, teleporting, and time travel. I may have even told him my thoughts about a cure for the boilermaker’s flu. I had to get back to the basics and figure out what a world-class safety culture was all about.
I didn’t need to dig far. I remember fumbling through a copy of the OSHA standards. For a while, it was an alphabet soup of subparts. Subpart C, General Health and Safety Provisions, kept glaring at me; I soon realized it was the foundation I was looking for. These are all things that a world-class safety culture should have. It was a starting place. Many jobsites I’ve managed safety on involved long-term work. I could at least hit the ground running and head in the right direction. I put steps in place throughout the project to build a world-class safety culture and carried the torch forward to other projects.
I am preaching to the choir when I say this; safety is a value. It’s something that is done every single day, all day long, and without change. It’s these little things I believe that build a world-class safety program. The big things always seem to happen on their own but do enough of these little things, and you’ll have the recipe for safety success.