For COVID-19 Reopening, Employee Safety Is Job One
As companies bring their factories back to life, the most critical challenge they face is ensuring the safety of their workers.
While the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the CDC and individual states provide basic guidance, in the age of COVID-19, protection for employees needs to be tailored to each company’s individual situation, notes Brandon Hody of Concurrent Technologies, who consults with shops to help them provide safe working environments.
The problem may come for businesses with organizations in multiple states because guidelines vary from state to state, Hody says. However, if a business doesn’t provide the same level of protection across state lines, this can become an issue for some employees, making them feel less safe.
And helping people feel safe at work is something all companies need to work at, Hody adds.
“Even before opening back up, ask your people what it will take to help them feel safe, and see if you can accommodate their recommendations,” he advises. “Their input helps them feel safer, like they’re part of the solution and they're providing value and tailoring their work to themselves.”
In addition to physical safety, Hody says employers need to consider the emotional health and well-being of their employees during this time of crisis.
“Dealing with unemployment, loss of income and possible illness of family members all adds more stress to daily life, so it’s important for employers to acknowledge this,” Hody says. “Involving your people in developing safety procedures and offering employee assistance programs can help alleviate some of that stress and even prevent possible workplace violence.”
READ MORE: Tips for Preparing for Viral Outbreaks in the Workplace
How to Social Distance in the Workplace
One of the trickier issues companies are dealing with is the 6-foot social distancing recommendation by the CDC, according to Hody.
“Companies that typically only run day shifts may add another shift to spread the workload,” Hody says. “By doing that, production is going to be slower, but when you have half as many people working at a time, you can social distance a lot better.”
In some cases, such as a stamping plant with a lone operator running one or two presses, there’s plenty of space to create enough social distancing, according to Harbour. “In other cases, companies have put up plexiglass to divide workstations where people sit close together while assembling parts,” she adds.
“The real challenge to distancing is around the time clock, the break room, restrooms and the daily standup meeting at the start of the shift,” she notes. “Some companies have even created enclosures around seats in the breakroom to separate employees during lunch.”
Cutting Costs and Restoring Cash Flow
After working to ensure employee safety, Harbour advises companies that their next priority is cutting costs and managing cash flow. And given that cash is what matters now, companies need to start looking more strategically at future sales, she adds.
“Companies need to be gathering a lot of data and calling their customers consistently to get a handle on forecasts because the ramp-up is going to be slow and unpredictable,” Harbour says.
“For example, if GM plans to open an automotive plant on May 18, but they can’t get parts out of Mexico, then what good is it to make parts here in Ohio?” she notes.
Because of this uncertainty, Harbour recommends that plants bring workers back in a paced, measured way, starting at about 60 percent of the pre-COVID volume.
“This is the deepest and most challenging dip we’ve ever had—but in every crisis, there is a positive for those companies that embrace it, and there will be opportunities for new products, new technology and automation,” Harbour says.
Investing for the Future
While businesses should be cutting costs in the long term, they should also plan to invest in new technologies as profits return, Harbour says. And some of those new opportunities will come as a result of reshoring the supply chain.
“In the next six to 12 months I think we’re going to see some part resourcing back to the U.S., because 95 percent of our PPE was made in China up until the COVID crisis, and we're realizing that we’ve got to make things here,” Harbour says.
“My caution is that we are a country with a short memory, so two or three years down the road, when we’re well beyond this crisis, price is still going to have an impact,” she says.
“We need smart thinking to drive efficiency in our business and be flexible as possible to manage this kind of downturn in the future, because there will always be something in the future.”
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