During five decades of work to prevent on-the-job injuries, the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration has set rules covering everything from the spacing of ladder rungs to how much light should be filtered out by welding helmets.
One thing it hasn’t done is require businesses to develop a comprehensive workplace safety program.
Nonetheless, agency leaders believe doing so is one of the most effective ways for businesses including machine shops and manufacturing facilities to comply with its array of regulations—and protect employees from harm.
“Losing workers to injury or illness, even for a short time, can cause significant disruption and cost—to you as well as the workers and their families,” the agency says in a guide listing its recommendations for such programs.
The initiatives are important because they “foster a proactive approach to ‘finding and fixing’ workplace hazards before they can cause injury or illness,” OSHA explains. “Rather than reacting to an incident, management and workers collaborate to identify and solve issues before they occur.”
That’s more practical, and constructive, than the typical reactive approach of taking action only after a worker is injured, a new regulation is passed or an outside inspection uncovers a problem, the agency adds.
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One study in Ohio, for instance, found that workers’ compensation claims dropped 52 percent after employers worked with the agency to adopt safety programs that followed its recommendations. The cost per claim fell 80 percent, OSHA says.
Building an effective safety program is much like building a house, says Gil Truesdale, president of Martin Technical, a safety training and consulting firm: It all starts with a plan.
‘Safety as a Culture’
“If you try to build your house with no plan, it will never get built,” he explains. “It will not be what you need, and there will be no documentation on what you did to be able to replicate it and build it again.”
Developing the plan around a safety calendar, with different focus areas for each month, can be particularly effective because it provides a timetable both for initial setup and periodic review.
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