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JOURNEY MANAGEMENT : And its effect on reducing exposure. What is Journey Management?. The process of implementing and exercising management controls to minimize road transport related risk and reduce exposures to people and equipment involved in work-related driving.
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What is Journey Management? • The process of implementing and exercising management controls to minimize road transport related risk and reduce exposures to people and equipment involved in work-related driving. • It’s actively managing and controlling driving activities in your organization. . . • It’s the things that you do to reduce risk to your employees and assets while they’re on the road. • It’s all encompassing.
Why should it be managed? • It’s one of our critical hazards • High Frequency: We do it every day (in every aspect of our operations) • In past 20 years: • Number of vehicles on the road has increased by 50% • Number of miles driven has increased by 80% • In 2008, roughly 42,000 fatalities in the U.S. • Leading cause of death in the country • Hazards will increase as growth trends continue • High Impact: Incident outcomes are often fatal
A good starting point for understanding journey management:What causes an employee to experience a vehicle accident or journey-related incident on the job? • Fatigue • Skills Deficit, Habits, Physical/mental disabilities • Unfamiliarity/Lack of Awareness • Improper/poorly maintained equipment • Drugs and Alcohol • Lack of Communication or Accountability • External Factors How many of the above conditions can be mitigated or eliminated through organizational influence?
Aspects of Journey Management:What are some controls that address incident causal factors? Controls for Fatigue . . . . • Fitness to work management • Managing employee hours / workload • Factoring in driving hours into work day • Employee/supervisor/dispatch interaction
What are some controls that address incident causal factors? Controls for Skills, Habits, Disabilities, Awareness • Confirming driver abilities/limitations/qualifications • Defensive Driver Training / Winter Driver Training • Road Tests • Driver orientations & training/ Route Familiarization • Should all our employees be allowed to drive?
What are some controls that address incident causal factors? Controls for Improper/Poor Equipment . . . • Formal/documented maintenance program • Routine vehicle inspections • Appropriate vehicle for scope of operation • Appropriate emergency/recovery equipment
What are some controls that address incident causal factors? Controls for Drugs and Alcohol . . . • Drug/alcohol testing • Employee/supervisor/dispatch interaction • Drug/alcohol awareness training
What are some controls that address incident causal factors? Communication Controls . . . • Dispatching Function and Protocol • Gaining account of people • Understanding where people are at and when they supposed to return • Call in / Call out Procedures • Confirming safe return and knowing when to initiate man-down procedures • Availability of communication tools • Cell phones for drivers (not while driving) • GPS
What are some controls that address incident causal factors? Some External Factors? • Bad weather / road conditions • Behaviors of other motorists • Driving in darkness Controls for external factors . . • Proper equipment • Work/driving curtailment at night • Driver training (defensive and winter driving) • Company policies on go/no-go criteria
How can we audit journey management? • Look at existence or absence of the types of controls we just discussed.
What we would want to accomplish with an audit: • Understand ways to improve and implement new controls for driving activities. • Not seeking out non-compliance, looking for opportunities to improve and bring back learnings to the group.