Balancing Old Safety Thinking and The 'New View'
Most recent thinking on safety is based on
ideas generally known as human and organizational performance—where it is
assumed workers will make errors and the emphasis is on the work environment
and processes to prevent severe injuries—rather than on disciplining workers
who violate safety rules. This change is great news for workers and safety in
general.
But it isn’t going to be easy to change the
construction industry, which could remain stuck with older ideas centered on
strict discipline, termination for safety violations and preoccupation with
lowering recordable injury rates. Balancing the new approach with the old could
turn out to be a delicate art. We have some ideas about how these new ideas on safety can be blended with
the existing systems. But first we ought to assess the challenge.
The new emphasis on human and
organizational performance (HOP), also known as the “New View,” has been
described as a “cross between system design and psychology” that relies on the
social sciences to better understand how to design resilient systems that
prevent severe injury.
One of the assumptions is that when humans
are involved, mistakes are inevitable. According to Andrea Baker, author of The
HOP Mentor, the goal is to design better
systems—including rules and methods of discipline—to “improve system resilience
to human error” and thereby reduce the consequences of such error.
What happens after an incident or broken
rule is important, too.
An employee who believes she or he may be
subject to disciplinary action is less likely to provide an employer the best,
most complete information about what happened. In an attempt to ask better
questions that go beyond the typical bias to identify errors and blame someone,
some companies have reduced the use of disciplinary action—such as suspensions
from work, or formal reprimands in the employment record—following
safety-related incidents. In some cases, employers have taken discipline off
the table completely to benefit the investigation.
For manufacturers and other employers whose
ability to obtain work does not depend on their safety record or adopting
another company’s safety approach, the shift to human and organizational
performance safety programs is largely uninhibited, at least as far as dealings
with other companies.
Internal naysayers, however, will challenge
and ask why they can’t just get rid of the uninterested or unteachable bad
apples on the staff and move on. But if high-level leaders embrace and drive
the new approach, leaders at all levels will ultimately capitulate and may even
find value in it.
Construction is different.
A contractor's business success depends on
its ability and willingness to embrace its customers’ demands on health and
safety—especially when it comes to the use of disciplining employees according
to the severity of their rules violation and relying heavily on recordable
injury rates. The rates have been shown to be an unreliable measure of
success.
Many clients choose not to implement the
new ideas, relying instead on old-school principles of disciplining rule
violators, zero-tolerance policies and measuring safety success in terms of
recordable incident rates.
In such cases, contractors will often find
themselves obligated under their contracts to cling to old-school tactics
rather than focusing on prevention of life-altering injuries and fatalities.
Subcontractors have even more challenges, as their clients are in all cases
contractors who will be bound by their own contractual requirements and who
live and die, from a business standpoint, on recordable injury rates.
While all contractual terms are
theoretically negotiable, to successfully run a business, many contractors and
subcontractors capitulate to most or all client requirements even if contrary
to human and organizational performance ideas and other modern approaches to
occupational safety.
Even if customers have moved to an approach
based on the New Thinking, they may deem contractors not worth the effort or
incapable of implementing the new ideas. Alternatively, the customers may view
the implementation on a construction project, which is far more short-lived
than their ongoing business, as too risky. In other words, their perspective
may be that there is no time to sculpt a workforce and the systems under which
it operates, and resort instead to the old idea that bad apples should be
identified and eliminated as soon as possible.
Short-term workforces pose other problems.
Managers may feel that there is no time to take a human and organizational
performance approach and that allowing employees to remain on site after they
have violated rules, such as those requiring 100% tie-off while working at
heights, is just too precarious. Clients may demand termination or some other
form of severe disciplinary action following any incident.
Those are the challenges. Human and
organizational performance ideas have produced radical changes in the mindset
of many environmental health and safety professionals and other company
managers. And while the obstacles to enacting the New View may seem high, they
are not insurmountable.