Survey reveals insights on EH&S professionals’ top 3 challenges
In late 2024, J. J. Keller & Associates, Inc., launched its first environmental health and safety (EH&S) benchmark study aimed at understanding state of the industry and the challenges faced by EH&S professionals. The survey was open to all individuals with responsibilities falling within the realm of environmental health and safety, and nearly 980 completed the survey. Most respondents work in manufacturing, construction, and “other” industries (ranging from aerospace to animal care to emergency response to oil and gas). Respondents told us their top three challenges are:
- Developing and maintaining EH&S programs: 67 percent
- Keeping up with regulatory changes: 66 percent
- Training and evaluating workers: 59 percent
There’s a sense of frustration with the difficulties in getting all employees to understand the importance of safety and consistently follow procedures, as well as the ongoing struggle to balance EH&S needs with other business demands.
So, what can safety professionals do to alleviate these challenges?
Developing and maintaining EH&S programs
Written safety plans (or programs) are records of how an establishment is protecting or plans to protect employees overall for a safety or health hazard. Writing an effective safety and health plan helps keep your training program organized and shows a good faith effort to comply with the regulations. Written safety plan requirements are found throughout 29 CFR 1910 for general industry and 29 CFR 1926 for construction and cover a number of different work operations and hazards. Because written plans are required for specific hazard topics on a standard-by-standard basis, their scope depends on the scope of the standards that carry written plan provisions. Most regulations have a scope and applicability section(s), so if you find that the regulation applies, check if there’s a written plan requirement.
Be sure to review your written plans when there are changes to work processes or procedures, and at least annually to ensure they’re working the way you intend. Your plan may look great on paper but if it’s not being put into practice, this is a compliance trouble spot!
Keeping up with regulatory changes
Although OSHA’s regulations generally move slowly through the pipeline, state-plan states tend to see more frequent regulatory activity, particularly California, Washington, and Oregon. Environmental regulations are much more active not only at the federal level but at the state and local levels. Some ideas for keeping on top of changes:
- Visit state and federal regulatory agency websites, such as osha.gov, and follow them on social media (i.e., LinkedIn). Most have an active social media platform to keep the public informed. Set a calendar reminder to make it a regular habit.
- Join industry associations and your local safety council. These groups host meetings and events that provide regulatory updates and best practices.
- Complete your J. J. Keller® Compliance Network profile builder. As a subscriber of this platform, you have an opportunity to curate the content you’re alerted to. This allows you to select your focus and regulatory areas that most impact your role and responsibilities.
Training and evaluating workers
When companies invest in training, they not only prioritize the health and safety of their employees but create a culture of safety awareness and compliance.
Although OSHA doesn’t require that you give a quiz after training, it’s a great way to determine if employees understand the material. Follow-up observations, safety incident statistics, and safety observation reporting are among ways to ensure employees apply training on the job.
Keep training applicable to the job. The best safety training is where employees can see, feel, and understand how the regulation and company rules can help to keep them safe and injury free.
Building training time into an already busy workday can be a challenge, particularly when you have multiple locations. Are you training too many employees? While more than 70 general industry regulations have training requirements, it’s likely that not all of them apply to work your employees are performing. Likewise, if there’s not an annual training requirement it may not be necessary to repeat your entire training program, but instead use toolbox talks or brief refresher trainings throughout the year.
Key to remember: To address the top challenges faced by EH&S professionals, focus on developing and maintaining effective EH&S programs, staying updated with regulatory changes, and providing relevant training and evaluation for workers.