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2. . WTP Environment 2001 - 2005. 2001 challenges
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1. 1 Background
EPC attitude (flip chart)
Get ‘er done
We’ve always done it that way
Focus on schedule/cost variance
Who is at fault
Traditional tried & true processes such as RCA
To be competitive, Bechtel implemented PBL in the late 90’s and Six Sigma in 2000 – integrated
ABC & Y=f(x)
WTP challenge – significant staffing challenge, 1800 in approximately 1 yr, different GBUs, new hires, etc...
Few NQA-1 qualified vendors
Frequent action to close a CAR is to revise procedure
On WTP, quality, safety and productivity improvements were addressed through six sigma and PBL
Six Sigma Black Belts were included as members or leads of all RCA’s since 2003.
Background
EPC attitude (flip chart)
Get ‘er done
We’ve always done it that way
Focus on schedule/cost variance
Who is at fault
Traditional tried & true processes such as RCA
To be competitive, Bechtel implemented PBL in the late 90’s and Six Sigma in 2000 – integrated
ABC & Y=f(x)
WTP challenge – significant staffing challenge, 1800 in approximately 1 yr, different GBUs, new hires, etc...
Few NQA-1 qualified vendors
Frequent action to close a CAR is to revise procedure
On WTP, quality, safety and productivity improvements were addressed through six sigma and PBL
Six Sigma Black Belts were included as members or leads of all RCA’s since 2003.
2. 2 WTP Environment 2001 - 2005 2001 challenges – hired/transferred 1800 in approximately 1 yr. from different Bechtel groups, new hires, staff augs
Majority of the technical training was required reading
Few NQA-1 qualified vendors
Corrective action improvements consistently included procedure revisions
Quality, safety and productivity improvements were addressed through six sigma and PBL
Bechtel implemented Performance Based Leadership in the late 90’s
Six Sigma in 2000
Both to improve productivity, quality of work
Six Sigma Black Belts were included as members or leads of all RCA’s since 2003.
Large reduction in force May 05 and November 05
3. 3 WTP Environment 2001 - 2005
Did latent organizational weaknesses exist?
4. 4 WTP Environment 2001 - 2005 2001 challenges – hired/transferred 1800 in approximately 1 yr. from different Bechtel groups, new hires, staff augs
Majority of the technical training was required reading
Few NQA-1 qualified vendors
Corrective action improvements consistently included procedure revisions
Quality, safety and productivity improvements were addressed through six sigma and PBL
Bechtel implemented Performance Based Leadership in the late 90’s
Six Sigma in 2000
Both to improve productivity, quality of work
Six Sigma Black Belts were included as members or leads of all RCA’s since 2003.
Large reduction in force May 05 and November 05
5. 5 Industry Event Causes Ask if front-line workers account for the bulk of causes of significant events. True or False?
If you were looking at the raw data here what would you conclude?
Ask if all other cause categories were added, what do we have? Organizational and management factors.
Nonwork practices: In the chart, 68% of causes of all significant events are attributable to organization and leadership.
Fact: Other sources indicate that the division is 80% organization and 20% individual (Rummler & Brache).
Ask if front-line workers account for the bulk of causes of significant events. True or False?
If you were looking at the raw data here what would you conclude?
Ask if all other cause categories were added, what do we have? Organizational and management factors.
Nonwork practices: In the chart, 68% of causes of all significant events are attributable to organization and leadership.
Fact: Other sources indicate that the division is 80% organization and 20% individual (Rummler & Brache).
6. 6
7. 7 Fall 2005 Nuclear Safety and Quality CultureBNI, DOE ORP and Office of Enforcement agreed WTP had weaknesses in: Procedure compliance
Adequacy of procedures
Training
Balance of cost, schedule, and quality
Communication and feedback
Quality improvement
Questioning attitude
Management behaviors
Assessment and oversight
Balancing safety, quality, cost and schedule
Verification of work activities
8. 8 Achieving nuclear safety and quality through procedure compliance Strategy:
Bottom up and top down
Focused
Working with employees to establish ownership
Strategy:
Bottom up and top down
Focused
Working with employees to establish ownership
9. WTP Nuclear Safety and Quality Imperative
10. 10 Nuclear Safety and Quality Imperative Project We are approaching this problem as though it was a project. We have defined the scope of work, assigned a senior manager and other organizational resources, developed an execution schedule, and have established metrics to provide feedback and enable assessment of our progress. The goal of this quality project is to ensure ongoing work is of adequate quality while we establish robust long term processes and most importantly create a work force with an enduring Nuclear Quality and Safety Culture.
On the wall you see several important charts that we will reference during this discussion. I would like to call your attention to the Nuclear Safety and Quality Work Breakdown Structure. This document is the foundation of our Quality Improvement Project.
We are approaching this problem as though it was a project. We have defined the scope of work, assigned a senior manager and other organizational resources, developed an execution schedule, and have established metrics to provide feedback and enable assessment of our progress. The goal of this quality project is to ensure ongoing work is of adequate quality while we establish robust long term processes and most importantly create a work force with an enduring Nuclear Quality and Safety Culture.
On the wall you see several important charts that we will reference during this discussion. I would like to call your attention to the Nuclear Safety and Quality Work Breakdown Structure. This document is the foundation of our Quality Improvement Project.
11. 11 Culture change strategy Moving our organizational culture to a level where our work is consistently performed to the highest level of nuclear quality is our top priority. We are approaching this change with a number of top-down actions as well as through many specific tactical actions taken at each functional level. Initially, our effort looked and felt a little disjointed. It was confusing to us and to our workforce and the results were disappointing. Over the past several months though, our efforts have coalesced into a structured approach that I believe will re-establish the confidence in our program and our people and result in overall project success.
Moving our organizational culture to a level where our work is consistently performed to the highest level of nuclear quality is our top priority. We are approaching this change with a number of top-down actions as well as through many specific tactical actions taken at each functional level. Initially, our effort looked and felt a little disjointed. It was confusing to us and to our workforce and the results were disappointing. Over the past several months though, our efforts have coalesced into a structured approach that I believe will re-establish the confidence in our program and our people and result in overall project success.
12. 12 Project-wide compensatory action
13. 13 Centralized issue tracking system: PIER System implemented to ease identification of issues
14. 14 NSQ culture change activities are pervasive
15. 15 Desired management behaviors Balance safety and quality and cost and schedule
Maintain consistent conservatism in decisions
Be receptive to constructive criticism, willing to acknowledge mistakes, and open and transparent
Willingness to actively listen, be influenced, provide feedback, interact with employees
Give measured, reflective, facts-based responses
Provide consistent, meaningful, positive reinforcement
Apply fair and consistent discipline
16. 16 Human Performance Senior Management sponsorship – Larry Simmons
Integrating HP into our current processes through employee education
Self assessments
CAR causal identification
Event critiques
Root Cause Analysis
Employee Concerns and Employee Relations investigations
Trained 69 people to date; 49 trained in the 4 day HPI course; 600+ trained at July Safety Rally (manuals & non-manuals); 2 trained at INPO
Moving toward self-sufficient training
Using EPC examples
17. 17 Procedures PIP – Process Phases:
Identify
Requirements
Process Mapping
Measure
Fishbone
XY Matrix
Data Collection
Analyze
Analyzed Data Collected
Review other sites procedures
18. 18 Procedures PIP – Process X’s (largest contributors):
Human Factors
Length
Complexity
Should vs. Shall
Structure
Inconsistencies
19. 19 Procedure improvements Identified potential improvement opportunities
Compared procedures with Savannah River Site
Improvement action items:
Revision of Document Administration Procedure
Standard structure
Clearer definitions
Include attributes of an adequate procedure
Better flowdown and change management
Evaluation/revision of AB/QAM affecting procedures
Three-phased approach; Phase I nearing completion Attributes of an adequate procedure
Identifies scope
Identifies and defines interfaces (responsibilities, information, and deliverables)
Defines division of responsibility
Implements valid requirements
Includes reasons and source for changes in revision history
Attributes of an adequate procedure
Identifies scope
Identifies and defines interfaces (responsibilities, information, and deliverables)
Defines division of responsibility
Implements valid requirements
Includes reasons and source for changes in revision history
20. 20 Training PIP Phases:
Identify & Measure
Requirements
Existing Process Mapping
Analyze
Identify Process (XY Matrix)
Design
Detailed Process Mapping
Verify
Plans and Schedules
21. 21 Training PIP – Process Potential Solutions:
Continue existing training program
Systematic Approach to Training on Positions that meet criteria (Graded Approach)
Systematic Approach to Training on all Positions
Supervisor verifies competency
22. 22 Training improvements Prior Approach
Manage/Supervisor accountability
On-target; procedure-focused
Narrow; limited classroom
Basis not well documented
No measure of effectiveness
Interim Actions
Discipline-specific enhancements to address identified shortcomings
Overall objective
Documented basis
Broad perspective
Effective media
23. 23 Engineering Actions Relevant management assessments:
Safety Envelope Conformance Self-assessment
Report For CIS Self-assessment 2006
Safety Envelope Maintenance Program Corrective Action Assessment
Safety envelope stand down conducted in July 2005
Personal Commitment to Safety Envelope Compliance in June 05.
Safety envelope training is the CBT module. Knowledge check causes student to access the Design Criteria Database (DCD) and perform searches that identify the criteria relevant to answering questions about specific proposed design changes.
“Technical criteria checklists” are in use by Mech Systems. Focus is on P&IDs.
“Improved feedback” comment for design criteria changes refers to the impact assessment/voting button process used when changes in the DCD are implemented. Process institutionalized in Design Criteria EDPI
Performance improvement noted following addition of ENS sign off on documents that require a safety screen.
Relevant management assessments:
Safety Envelope Conformance Self-assessment
Report For CIS Self-assessment 2006
Safety Envelope Maintenance Program Corrective Action Assessment
Safety envelope stand down conducted in July 2005
Personal Commitment to Safety Envelope Compliance in June 05.
Safety envelope training is the CBT module. Knowledge check causes student to access the Design Criteria Database (DCD) and perform searches that identify the criteria relevant to answering questions about specific proposed design changes.
“Technical criteria checklists” are in use by Mech Systems. Focus is on P&IDs.
“Improved feedback” comment for design criteria changes refers to the impact assessment/voting button process used when changes in the DCD are implemented. Process institutionalized in Design Criteria EDPI
Performance improvement noted following addition of ENS sign off on documents that require a safety screen.
24. 24 Procedure compliance checklists Purpose: Leading indicator to identify error precursor conditions
Implemented by document checker as part of normal, pre-approval, document review
Used for calculations, drawings, specifications, material requisitions, and supplier deviation disposition requisitions
Initial results:
High originator compliance by attribute (0.25% checker “holds” for correction by originator)
About 8% of design documents had at least one compliance “hold” for correction that was identified during checking
Metrics pinpoint actionable areas of improvement opportunity Procedure compliance checklists are a Compensatory Action with respect to full development of NSQ culture changes.
“Leading Indicators” because they are deployed in checking process (prior to document approval)
Approx 1,100 checklists completed over 8 week period beginning 24 April 06
Total of 41,225 unique procedure compliance requirements are associated with the 1100 documents for which checklists have been completed to date (about 40 requirements per document).
Directly relevant to weaknesses:
Promotes/improves procedure compliance
Improves knowledge of procedure requirements (training)
Useful as an oversight tool
Allows checkers greater focus on technical attributes and supports a “zero defect” criteria when documents are submitted for approval
Previous efforts to improve calculation quality have proven beneficial, as originators have been conditioned to utilize the checklists in preparing the document. “Checker holds” for calculations is lowest of all document types (< 6%)
Documents that represent interrelated requirements or that combine processes from one or more EDPIs, although produced in smaller numbers, have a higher non-compliance score.
Document originators are also using the checklists during document preparation. This is a good practice and is being encouraged.
Issues identified by checkers generally did not accumulate in any specific procedural requirement, indicating that procedure clarity may not be a problem, however, more data is necessary to make that determination.
“Actionable areas” currently focus on one-on-one or group coaching to improve understanding of requirements.
Checklists are capable of pointing out the need for discipline-specific instruction to improve performance by originators. (See next page)Procedure compliance checklists are a Compensatory Action with respect to full development of NSQ culture changes.
“Leading Indicators” because they are deployed in checking process (prior to document approval)
Approx 1,100 checklists completed over 8 week period beginning 24 April 06
Total of 41,225 unique procedure compliance requirements are associated with the 1100 documents for which checklists have been completed to date (about 40 requirements per document).
Directly relevant to weaknesses:
Promotes/improves procedure compliance
Improves knowledge of procedure requirements (training)
Useful as an oversight tool
Allows checkers greater focus on technical attributes and supports a “zero defect” criteria when documents are submitted for approval
Previous efforts to improve calculation quality have proven beneficial, as originators have been conditioned to utilize the checklists in preparing the document. “Checker holds” for calculations is lowest of all document types (< 6%)
Documents that represent interrelated requirements or that combine processes from one or more EDPIs, although produced in smaller numbers, have a higher non-compliance score.
Document originators are also using the checklists during document preparation. This is a good practice and is being encouraged.
Issues identified by checkers generally did not accumulate in any specific procedural requirement, indicating that procedure clarity may not be a problem, however, more data is necessary to make that determination.
“Actionable areas” currently focus on one-on-one or group coaching to improve understanding of requirements.
Checklists are capable of pointing out the need for discipline-specific instruction to improve performance by originators. (See next page)
25. 25 Procedure compliance checklists (examples) This slide illustrates the utility of the checklists:
Across all discipline drawing checklists, questions 13, 24 and 32 were missed most frequently (with a noticeable spike on 32).
Dev 13 ) “Drawing/DCN is consistent with other design documentation (i.e., P&IDs, V&IDs, data sheets, specifications).”
Dev 24 ) “Drawing incorporates identification and location of equipment, and current supplier designs as applicable.”
Dev 32 ) “Revisions are clearly identified such as by placing a cloud around the change and marking with revision triangles.” (Note that this was an element of Quality Level (spool) issue and highlighted in OE letter.)
For Electrical detail chart:
Dev 32 ) “Revisions are clearly identified such as by placing a cloud around the change and marking with revision triangles.”
Dev 13 ) “Drawing/DCN is consistent with other design documentation (i.e., P&IDs, V&IDs, data sheets, specifications).”
Dev 24 ) “Drawing incorporates identification and location of equipment, and current supplier designs as applicable.”
Dev 16 ) “Drawing numbering is in accordance with 24590-WTP-GPP-PADC-001, WTP Document Numbering.“
Dev 20 ) “Drawings were checked for resolution of identified issues identified in the 3-D Model, and any revisions were appropriately completed.”
This slide illustrates the utility of the checklists:
Across all discipline drawing checklists, questions 13, 24 and 32 were missed most frequently (with a noticeable spike on 32).
Dev 13 ) “Drawing/DCN is consistent with other design documentation (i.e., P&IDs, V&IDs, data sheets, specifications).”
Dev 24 ) “Drawing incorporates identification and location of equipment, and current supplier designs as applicable.”
Dev 32 ) “Revisions are clearly identified such as by placing a cloud around the change and marking with revision triangles.” (Note that this was an element of Quality Level (spool) issue and highlighted in OE letter.)
For Electrical detail chart:
Dev 32 ) “Revisions are clearly identified such as by placing a cloud around the change and marking with revision triangles.”
Dev 13 ) “Drawing/DCN is consistent with other design documentation (i.e., P&IDs, V&IDs, data sheets, specifications).”
Dev 24 ) “Drawing incorporates identification and location of equipment, and current supplier designs as applicable.”
Dev 16 ) “Drawing numbering is in accordance with 24590-WTP-GPP-PADC-001, WTP Document Numbering.“
Dev 20 ) “Drawings were checked for resolution of identified issues identified in the 3-D Model, and any revisions were appropriately completed.”
26. 26 Procedure compliance checklists Actions based on metrics:
Continue using checklists for all calculations, drawings, specifications, material requisitions, and supplier deviation disposition requests
Discipline-specific actions based on metrics:
Originator feedback for non-recurring checker “holds”
Staff coaching for recurring checker “holds”
Procedure clarification
Detailed discipline-specific metrics have been prepared for the disciplines. This action is in progress by the DSLs.
Based on indication that inter-related processes, and processes not used as often (i.e., MRs SDDRs) both benefit from compliance checklists.
Evaluate expansion of procedure compliance checklists to other document types. A number of Commercial Grade Dedication (CGD) CARs were issued recently; it may be advisable to generate a checklist for application of CGD.
Detailed discipline-specific metrics have been prepared for the disciplines. This action is in progress by the DSLs.
Based on indication that inter-related processes, and processes not used as often (i.e., MRs SDDRs) both benefit from compliance checklists.
Evaluate expansion of procedure compliance checklists to other document types. A number of Commercial Grade Dedication (CGD) CARs were issued recently; it may be advisable to generate a checklist for application of CGD.
27. 27 Potential At Risk Practices Performing a task with two or more procedures
Following procedures cookbook style
Removing several danger tags quickly without annotating removal of the tags on the clearance sheet
Performing critical checks without peer review or concurrent verification
Having several review and approval steps
Attempting to lift too much weight to avoid multiple trips
Signing off several steps of a work plan or procedure before performing the steps
28. 28 Construction Actions
29. 29 Changing our behavior Safety leadership development training
Communications
Planning
Leading indicators and metrics
Motivation
Revising site work rules and discipline policy with the Safety Alliance
Implementing HPI
Application process for VPP Star Status
Specific goals in key managers’ annual reviews and performance measurement plans
30. 30 Events Occur . . . More often due to error-prone tasks and error-prone work environments than from error-prone individuals.
Error prone tasks and work environments are usually created by latent organizational weaknesses.
31. 31 How do we measure culture? We have contemplated numerous metrics to help us assess how we are doing. You have seen some results from our employee surveys, and you can see we have two primary metrics on the wall that measure significance of our events and the point that they were identified. We have considered the school of thought that says an increase in the level of self identified problems is a positive indicator because it demonstrates an active assessment program and a questioning attitude. Conversely it may also indicate deteriorating quality performance. The reverse argument can be made for a metric that shows a reduction in identified quality problems. The metrics we have settled on enable us to analyze the significance of the issue and when and how the issues are being identified. Our goal is to see the significance of the problems diminish and the identification of the problem occur earlier in the process.
We have contemplated numerous metrics to help us assess how we are doing. You have seen some results from our employee surveys, and you can see we have two primary metrics on the wall that measure significance of our events and the point that they were identified. We have considered the school of thought that says an increase in the level of self identified problems is a positive indicator because it demonstrates an active assessment program and a questioning attitude. Conversely it may also indicate deteriorating quality performance. The reverse argument can be made for a metric that shows a reduction in identified quality problems. The metrics we have settled on enable us to analyze the significance of the issue and when and how the issues are being identified. Our goal is to see the significance of the problems diminish and the identification of the problem occur earlier in the process.