1 / 30

Safety Profession in these Economic Times San Francisco PDC—2/18/09

Safety Profession in these Economic Times San Francisco PDC—2/18/09 American Society of Safety Engineers www.ASSE.org Warren K. Brown, CSP, ARM, CSHM President Discussion Points American Society of Safety Engineers Challenges Safety and good corporate governance

paul
Download Presentation

Safety Profession in these Economic Times San Francisco PDC—2/18/09

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Safety Profession in these Economic TimesSan Francisco PDC—2/18/09 American Society of Safety Engineers www.ASSE.org Warren K. Brown, CSP, ARM, CSHM President

  2. Discussion Points • American Society of Safety Engineers • Challenges • Safety and good corporate governance • Safety professional competencies • Adding value to the organization • Influence and technical advisor • Maintaining safety during downturn • Your involvement in ASSE

  3. 1914 the USCI name changed to American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) 25 March 1911 146 female garment workers died ASSE was founded on October 14, 1911 in New York City as the United Society of Casualty Inspectors (USCI) with 62 members. At the time of the fire the factory fire exit doors were locked …the doors that were not locked only opened inwards and were effectively held shut by the onrush of workers trying to escape the fire. ….the only safety measures available for the workers were 27 buckets of water.

  4. ASSE – By The Numbers • 32,000+ members- located in 75 countries • 151 Chapters & 31 Sections • 38 Student Sections

  5. Vision …be a global champion of the SH&E professional …a global leader of the profession …a premier resource …for those engaged in protecting people, property and the environment

  6. ASSE Mission Statement ASSE is a global member-driven society • providing representation • promotion and support for those engaged in the profession and/or the practice of safety, health and environment in their efforts to protect people, property and the environment. * Promotes occupational safety and health in the court of public opinion – works to increase awareness and educate publics worldwide

  7. Sections Chapters STRUCTURED to DELIVER MEMBERS ® 14 Practice Specialties and Branches House Of Delegates Areas CoC Regions CoPS CoMRA CoPA CoPD Board of Directors (volunteer leaders)

  8. Challenges • ILO estimates work related incidents and diseases kill 2.2 million workers annually and cost 4% of the world’s GDP • Globally our cultures, languages and governments may differ but safety must transcend these differences applying to all people, businesses and organizations • Role of the safety professional and needed competencies

  9. Challenges • Safety important part of corporate social responsibility as well as good corporate governance • Business of safety has diverted focus from safety being part of corporate social responsibility • ASSE supporting safety principles as part of organizational mission and vision statements • Oversight of safety at CEO and BOD levels

  10. Social Responsibility Principles - Examples • We want to be a leader in Health, Safety and Environmental Protection (HSE). - The safety of our employees, neighbors, customers, consumers and all others affected by our business activities, as well as protection of the environment, have priority in all our activities. • Working Conditions Occupational safety and health - For instance -- factories shall comply with all applicable laws and regulations regarding working conditions and shall provide workers with a safe and healthy environment.

  11. Value of the Safety Professional Study • The primary objective of the ASSE research garnered from about 3,000 people was to identify gaps in perceptions between safety professionals and senior management. Specifically, the research was designed to: • Measure the importance and perceived value of the safety function overall and on a list of specific departmental tasks. • Identify overall strengths and weaknesses of safety professionals in general. • Identify the relative importance of professional credentials/designations and business skills compared to other characteristics when hiring safety function job candidates. • Investigate barriers that exist in companies which impact the effectiveness of individuals performing the safety function.

  12. Value of the Safety Professional – Business Skills Areas in which performance fell below expectations: Business And Strategy • Plans and reacts strategically • Transforms data/insights into practical solutions • Develop methods that integrate safety performance into business productivity • Aligns the group’s project plans with overall business strategy • Understands financial related terms and information • Evaluates proposed investments against their projected payoff

  13. Value of the Safety Professional – Technical Skills Areas of Technical Safety Expertise • Assess the probability and severity of losses and accidents that may result from hazards • Implement techniques to evaluate hazard control and program effectiveness • Provide advice in planning, design, development, fabrication, testing and packaging of products or services regarding safety requirements/principles (this is also the least likely task routinely performed at companies)

  14. Safety Professional Competencies • Business management skills such as understanding organizational behavior, financial literacy, and strategic thinking • New responsibilities including environmental, wellness, risk management, loss prevention, emergency planning and response, business continuity, security, and more.

  15. Safety Professional Competencies • Finding new ways to leverage safety concepts with other organizational initiatives such as the greening movement • Integrating the safety management system with other corporate management systems • Increasing use of measurement tools

  16. Safety Professional Competencies • Ability to influence and articulate value to their organization - Listening skills - Communicating - Resolving conflict - Motivating - Team building - Understanding change management principles

  17. Value of the Safety Professional Project

  18. Safety During Economic Downturn • If companies believe they will save money by reducing or ignoring safety for their workers, customers and communities they do business in, they are mistaken, ASSE President Warren K. Brown, CSP, ARM, CSHM, notes. In the long run cutting these programs will only result in greater costs for businesses through higher accident rates, increased health and insurance costs, reduction in company trust and more. The cost of preventing work related injuries and illnesses is far less than the cost of correcting them.

  19. Safety During Economic Downturn • Companies must maintain solid safety process even during difficult times • Safety professional is integral part of the safety process • Good safety process is not just regulatory • Fatal injury rate was 3.7 per 100,000 workers in 2007 • Workplaces are safer today than before OSHA and MSHA

  20. Costs • Workplace deaths, illnesses and injuries cost US $170 billion each year • Indirect costs of incidents may be as much as 20 times direct costs • Organizations that invest in safety see positive impact on bottom line • SHARP participant reduced incident rate from 28.5 to 8.3

  21. Safety Support • PS article indicated direct correlation between a company’s performance in safety and financial results • Fall protection program reduced incident costs by 96% • Society saves when there are fewer incidents – increases everyone’s quality of life in a positive way • Safety’s positive return on investment is gaining attention from investors

  22. What’s ahead that you may be interested in… • A Construction symposium was held November 20-21, 2008 in Scottsdale to address key issues in this industry including crane safety and falls • SeminarFest 2009 celebrated its 10th anniversary in Las Vegas – another sell out crowd to hear and learn from the top in our industry • A special management symposium was held January 22-23, 2009 in CA on the topic of "Culture“ delving into the corporate tools we all need to help us communicate with upper management – tapes of the presentations are available on-line • Our first ever Virtual symposium will occur April 20 thru 24 – people are already registering and it’s a new way ASSE is working to reach our diverse membership with programs that are easily accessible • We will be developing and distributing more information from our members on Safety in Greening in all industries – building on the hospitality industry’s white paper done through our Practice Specialties group • As noted The Safety Professionals handbook – in the works since 2002 with 79 chapters written by SH&E experts and peer-reviewed…much of the royalties from this book will go to the Foundation to be administered by Penn State University – where the editor and ASSE member Dr. Joel Haight is from • We are working with members on celebrations to take place throughout 2011 for our 100th anniversary …more on this will be coming out shortly..and we need everyone’s input

  23. More Offerings • ASSE will be finalizing and distributing a Teen Workplace Safety Outreach Guide for our members with tips and contact information to reach out to schools along with planning guides and tools to use when talking to teens about being safe at work and about the profession – we will also be rolling out a safety video game, currently named DO or DIE while it is in development aimed at reaching the teen audience • I spoke at the World Safety and Health Congress in S. Korea and the 4th SAWS safety conference in Beijing– we will continue the dialogue on a need to prevent workplace injuries and illnesses worldwide and we found that ASSE was the only group advocating and educating the audience on the importance of the safety, health and environmental professional • “Safety Means Always Coming Home” is the NAOSH Week 2009 theme which runs from May 3 – 9, 2009 and Occupational Safety and Health Professional Day is May 6 go to the www.asse.org/naosh09 web pages for tools and information and consider joining us and the hundreds of thousands of businesses, ASSE, OSHA and millions of people worldwide in supporting what you do every day and raising awareness of workplace safety.. • The 7th annual ASSE Kids’ ‘Safety-on-the-Job’ poster contest runs from this September 19 through Valentine’s Day, Feb. 14, 2009 --- there are many prizes and recognitions for the children and what better way to teach kids about what their parents, aunts and uncles, grandparents, etc. do each day to keep people safe and to learn about job safety……they learn about job safety early on and help us spread the word…

  24. Thanks for Supporting NAOSH Week • Winners of the 6th Annual ASSE Poster Contest at the DOL • Seated with the winners, are (from left) CSSE's Andrew Cooper, OSHA's Deputy Asst Secretary Don Shalhoub, and ASSE's President Michael W. Thompson. • The American Society of Safety Engineers Thanks Everyone For Making NAOSH Week and Occupational Safety and Health Professional Day 2008 • another major success. You have helped us reach millions of people worldwide -- businesses, workers and families – • with key safety tips, information and solutions. You have helped make a difference. • NAOSH 2008 Website

  25. What Do “I” Get for My Dues? So How Can “I” Maximize The Value of “My” Membership? Maybe a better question to ask is… Get Involved!

  26. … Member-Driven Association … You joined ASSE with some particulardesires and needs in mind. Have you thought about your personal return on your time investment into ASSE Leadership? Thousands of members benefit from their leadership experiences and new skill sets at the local, area, regional and society levels.

  27. Skills You Will Learn Through Member Involvement • Leadership skills • Management skills • Communication skills • Networking skills • Presentation skills • Time management skills • Team working skills • Meeting skills • Project skills and more!

  28. Opportunities Exist at:Chapter LevelRegion/Area LevelSociety Level

  29. Show Your Interest Online • Go to www.asse.org/membership/leadershipConnection.php Review Committees, Requirements, Expectations, etc. • Put your name in for interest in different committees. • Committees reviewed each spring

  30. Thank you for your support, for being a member of ASSE and for being An Every Day Hero You do make a difference in the world and with ASSE THANK YOU

More Related