Are You Good or Are You Lucky?
How many times have you said to yourself, “Wow! That was a close one. I was lucky!”?
Maybe you started to change lanes without looking over your shoulder and spotted a vehicle emerging from your blind spot. Perhaps you crossed the street while looking down at your cell phone as you heard a car come to a screeching halt. Or you realized that pot was still boiling on the stove as you smelled smoke.
Whether it’s at home or work, our brains often shift to autopilot when we perform familiar tasks, and we only think about potential consequences after the fact. In the construction industry, we take close calls so seriously that we have a dedicated term for them: near misses. Several leading construction firms like ĂŰ˝ŰÖ±˛Ą enforce strict safety guidelines to ensure that safety is never left to chance. Despite our collective best efforts, however, incidents continue to occur across the industry.
At ĂŰ˝ŰÖ±˛Ą, we believe that even one injury is too many. Our safety program is known as Zero Harm, which we take to mean zero deaths, zero injuries to our people or the public, zero ruined lives, and zero harm to the environment. Our safety, health, and environment experts continually study industry trends about incidents to prevent them on our jobs. Across the board, a recurring theme is almost always present. The original plan that was developed for the activity was not followed due to a new condition or obstacle that was not previously planned for, present or known.
The possibilities of changes that happen on-site are seemingly endless. Material staged where it should not have been, work performed out of sequence, or unanticipated groundwater—just to name a few. One of the reasons our business faces such an uphill battle to keep workers safe is that changes also originate off the job site. These can stem from design changes, subcontractor management decisions, or even local government ordinances.
Construction workers must adapt to incredibly complex, changing conditions every day, and in most cases, do so without suffering any incidents or injuries. But how many times do workers alter the original plan without considering the collateral safety implications? Odds are, just like the driver casually changing lanes, they’ve done this for years without thinking twice. This leads us to a critical question. When it comes to safety, are you good or are you lucky?
It’s a topic every team who’s investigated a safety incident has asked themselves. “Was our previous performance the result of a proactive safety culture or simply blind luck?” Luck looks back in hindsight and assumes good, because no one got hurt. Good seeks to discover and prevent the circumstances under which incidents might occur. Good is leading, luck is lagging.
“I do not believe in luck,” affirms Leary Jones, vice president- of safety, health & environmental for the California Division. “Educating the masses on a continued basis and measuring their retention by evaluating their performances in the field is one of the key ingredients to a successful safety program. To address this, we offer behavioral training where the emphasis is placed on core cultural values, designed to eventually create a paradigm shift that enhances and strengthens our safety culture.”
Safety measures are also taking place well in advance of any project mobilization. “Our personnel are required to attend the “Zero Harm, Safety Awareness For Everyone (S.A.F.E)” behavioral training which emphasizes human values versus policies and procedures,” adds Leary. “Because of this training, we are observing a cultural shift in safety awareness and performance due to the fact all of our workers are empowered to speak up when they see a safety infraction. Not only are they encouraged to call it to our attention, but they are also asked to follow up with us to ensure that we have taken the appropriate abatement action if needed. This type of action is in line with our national campaign of “See Something, Say Something.”
ĂŰ˝ŰÖ±˛Ą's teammates know that safety is not an accident but is achieved by examining changing conditions and other potential hazards with unwavering focus. Ralph Waldo Emerson once said, “Shallow men believe in luck or in circumstance. Strong men believe in cause and effect.” On and off the job site, are you good or are you lucky? The choice is up to you.