Train employees and listen to their feedback
What good is a safety program if the employees don’t know how to follow it? Training is a key component that should be seamlessly integrated.
“Training really should be a reflection of your written program,” Starke explains. “When you select a trainer, you should be using somebody who wants to understand your program and tailor that training around your program. Don’t get an out-of-the-box trainer who’s just giving the same training to everybody.”
As Starke alluded to earlier, it’s essential that a safety program not only keep the manufacturer in compliance, but also be functional for how the company operates.
“Again, in those trainings you’ll have the maintenance workers, the people you’re expecting to follow the program,” he says. “That’s where they’re going to tell you what’s working and what’s not working, and that gives you another opportunity to be more proactive in modifying your policy as opposed to reactive, where you’re waiting for near misses—those potentially dangerous things—to drive change within a program or policy.”
Insist on safety industry expertise
Manufacturers maintaining their own safety programs must make sure that their safety managers are experienced. With Brady, there is no need to worry.
Brady employs about 35 field engineers around the country who visit customer facilities full time. “We look for specific characteristics when hiring for our field engineering team,” Starke says. “They are former maintenance managers, former maintenance technicians, people with safety degrees and backgrounds. Engineers of all sorts: electrical, chemical, mechanical.
“The common denominator with the people on our team,” he continues, “is they have a deep understanding of not just the regulations but how equipment works, what motivates our customers, what their priorities are and how we can help them navigate that.”
Regularly evaluate the company’s safety program
Manufacturing companies should include regular checkups of their safety procedures.
“Over time, programs and policies fall out of date, so it is important to review those periodically, like on an annual basis,” Starke says. “In the case of lockout/tagout, OSHA has a requirement to periodically inspect your procedures. That is a great time to review your program. Is the policy still serving you the way that you need it to, or have you had changes to your organization, to your equipment, that would require you to modify your safety program?”
Read more: 7 Steps Safety Experts Recommend to Improve LOTO Procedures
Look for efficiencies in maintaining the program
If a manufacturer manages its safety program on its own, is it the most effective use of everyone’s time? This could be an area where an outside company can help greatly.
“When it comes to writing, say, lockout/tagout procedures, what we can do in two or three weeks some companies will spend all year trying to do on their own,” Starke says. “We bring that efficiency, that knowledge. There’s peace of mind that when Brady’s done, they’re in a really good place.”
The right software can help with efficiency, too. Brady’s LINK360, for example, makes it easy for manufacturers to maintain procedures for lockout/tagout and confined space programs.
“This is the tool my team uses to write procedures quickly, efficiently and in a standardized fashion, and it’s available to our clients,” Starke says. “When procedures become due for audit, the LINK360 software tells you. It allows you to make updates and edits quickly and efficiently. It helps you with documentation.”
After the safety policies are created, reviewed and implemented, it pays to have a robust suite of products to support the safety program in the future, and to know that a supplier is there when needed. For example, Brady features lines of locks and lockout devices and label makers that can be used with LINK360 to print lockout tags consistently and without smudgy handwriting.
“We are proud to be a full-solution provider,” Starke says. “Yes, we offer services but also integrated systems to help sustain those programs once we leave, and we’ve got tools for them to execute on a daily basis.”
Talk to Us!
Leave a reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *