Dear Friends,
Thanks for your nice post, Mr. TSS.
I take this opportunity to bring out some criticism on the working of safety departments or safety staff.
I have always found that the chief executives are never averse to implementing essential safety measures. When the safety department wants something done and if it is recommended to do so, the originator often fails to convince the decision-maker. If the decision-maker seeks clarifications before approval, the originator fails to provide them. Probably, it will not come back to the decision-maker with the sought clarifications, and it gets dropped. The reason safety recommendations are not approved is often due to the lack of acceptable reasons provided with the recommendation initially. Executives are not puppets to approve whatever is submitted from safety or any other department; they too are accountable and require reasoning for approval.
For the failure on the part of safety personnel to convince the management, we often blame the management for not being interested in safety. If the decision-maker asks for three points, often safety personnel are not equipped to answer even one convincingly.
On the other hand, in organizations with effective safety departments, we can see that the personality of the safety staff propels it to the top and engages the executives significantly in the activities. Safety personnel also require very good communication skills as they are supposed to deal only with top management personnel to obtain policy decisions.
How many of our safety personnel are capable of doing justice to their roles? I assure you, not many, and this situation has to change.
Let safety personnel assess themselves:
1. Am I equipped with the required knowledge?
2. Am I fully conversant with the statutory requirements?
3. Am I aware of the modern techniques of safety management?
4. How are my communication skills?
5. What am I lacking in my approach to management?
6. Am I doing justice to the profession?
There are many more aspects to consider.
We need to rethink before blaming management for a lack of interest in safety.
A reminder: While I am pointing one finger at others, three remain pointed towards me.
Regards,
Kesava Pillai