Building a Strong Safety Culture (OnDemand Webinar)

$149.00

SKU: 409445EAU

Description

Understand the elements of a strong safety culture and how safety incentive programs can backfire and reduce morale.Employers are being more critically scrutinized not just for their baseline safety and health compliance, but for the state of their safety culture. OSHA, the National Labor Relations Board, and the EEOC have entered into a joint initiative to protect workers’ rights at all levels and to coordinate such protections. This brings a company’s safety culture into heightened focus, as complaints to one agency can be investigated and prosecuted by any or all. In addition, more state OSHA agencies are looking to regulate safety culture in the form of mandatory safety and health management systems (SHMS). This initiative, which saw movement in the Obama administration, may gain traction again under current OSHA leadership. This course will explain the elements of a strong safety culture, how the terms values and priorities can entrap employers, and how safety incentive programs can backfire and reduce morale or lead to more OSHA issues. We will address the role of ANSI and ISO standards in benchmarking safety, health performance, and culture. We will also cover best practices for continual improvement and improved training, communication, and risk assessment. The material will also cover how OHS culture is a key consideration in rating companies’ ESG performance, critical for publicly traded companies.

Date: 2022-04-12 Start Time: End Time:

Learning Objectives

Overview: What Is a Safety Culture?
• Defining a Strong Safety Culture
• Safety Values vs. Priorities
• Role of Safety Culture in DEI/ESG Initiatives
• Benchmarking Safety and Health Performance

Safety Culture and OHS Management Systems
• Mandatory Programs • State OSHA Agencies
• Federal OSHA and SHMS Initiatives
• Coordination Between OSHA, NLRB, and EEOC
• SHMS and Voluntary Consensus Standards (ANSI, ISO)

Safety Culture and Incentive Programs
• Hazard Recognition, Risk Assessment, and JHA
• Incentivizing Safety Observations and Other Proactive Systems
• Lagging Indicator Incentive Programs and OSHA Whistle-Blower Issues
• Near-Miss Reporting Systems and Discipline
• Supervisor Training and Communication: The Critical Components

Conclusion
• Best Practices for Improving Your Safety Culture
• Resources for Employers and Workers
• Pitfalls to Avoid

ASA ,BCSP ,Additional credit may be available upon request. Contact Lorman at 866-352-9540 for further information.

Adele L. Abrams, Esq., ASP, CMSP-Law Office of Adele L. Abrams P.C.