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The Safety Culture Snapshot

Action Planning Template - Example

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EXAMPLE - Action Planning Template
  What work happened to develop the plan?
Safety Culture Category: Reporting & Leaning for Safety The H&S Coordinator looked at the Snapshot results and the lowest score was for Reporting and Learning for safety– red flagging it as an area worth exploring.
Understanding the problem:
  • Poor feedback to and from the guys
  • Incidents not getting reported or reports coming in very late
  • There is some “fear” of reporting
  • Poor understanding what information the reports need to include
  • The report forms are too complex

Following the Snapshot results, the H&S Coordinator had a talk with the foreman and the H&S rep to get their thoughts on the reporting form and process from a ‘coal face perspective’ – and they agreed that the form was too complicated and the guys did not know why reporting was important as they never see what happens with the results. It also emerged they worried that reporting an accident might result in disciplinary action. He also looked at the some of the historical reports and could see they were poorly completed.

Goals:
  • Improve frontline understanding of why reporting is important
  • Increase reporting levels
  • All incidents are reported and investigated
Based on the H&S Coordinator’s discussions with the foreman and H&S Rep, as well as his review of previous reports he identified these 3 goals as achievable and directly linked to the problem.

 

Action steps to be taken By who By when Resources needed Barriers Who to inform
1. Look at how others are reporting incidents
  • Talk to other businesses or your industry association
  • Talk about how the guys think reporting could be simplified/improved
  • H&S coordinator
By June
  • Internet
  • Team meeting time
  • Time to talk to other businesses
  • Safety Briefings - Reporting and investigating / Learning from mistakes
  • Safety Briefings – Employee Involvement
  • Reluctance of other businesses to share information
  • Frontline reluctance to share ideas
  • No understanding of report requirement or importance of reporting
  • Literacy and numeracy of front line
  • Employees
  • Contractors
2. Review and improve the reporting form and reporting process
  • H&S coordinator
Mid July
  • Time to do the work
  • Computer / Internet
  • Safety Briefings - Reporting and investigating / Learning from mistakes
  • Safety Briefings – Safety communications
  • Availability of existing paperwork
  • Owner
  • H&S Rep
  • Foreman
3. Team meeting to test and review the prototype form and reporting process
  • Refine the form or process as needed
  • H&S coordinator
  • Frontline team
Early August
  • Team meeting time
  • Time to do the work
  • Coaching for Safety – Holding and Facilitating effective meetings
  • Coaching for Safety – Questions
  • Making time to have the meeting
  • Team reluctance to make a contribution
  • Team confusion on what is being asked of them and why
  • Team
  • Contractors
4. Meeting to introduce the new form and process to the foreman and H&S rep so they are on board and know why and how to use the new form and process
  • H&S coordinator
Mid August
  • Meeting time
  • Coaching for Safety – Holding and Facilitating effective meetings
  • Coaching for Safety – Questions
  • Making time to have the meeting
  • Resistance if they feel their ideas haven’t been listened to
  • Foreman
  • H&S Rep
5. Team meeting to introduce the new form and process to the frontline and provide some introductory training for H&S rep
  • Could use model report forms or example safety alerts to show the value of reporting alerts (own crew examples)
  • Could do some analysis of hazards with the crew to show them how the information can be used
  • H&S coordinator
  • Foreman
  • H&S Rep
  • Owner (to signal importance)
Mid August
  • Team meeting time
  • Coaching for Safety – Holding and Facilitating effective meetings
  • Coaching for Safety – Questions
  • Training materials (e.g. examples of good reporting forms, or industry alerts)
  • Resistance and no confidence to report after negative consequences or inaction previously
  • Literacy and numeracy problems at the front line
  • Simplicity of the paperwork
  • Team
  • Contractors
  • Owner
6. Set up and roll out a rewards programme for improved reporting rates.
  • Ask the team what would make a good reward (e.g. fuel vouchers, grocery vouchers?)
  • Let the team know what the rewards will be given for (e.g. near miss reports? Complete forms? Timely forms)
  • Do it regularly – fortnightly or monthly to reinforce the right behaviours
  • Get the owner to give the reward – sends the right message
  • H&S coordinator
  • Owner
September onwards
  • Budgets
  • Small gift / rewards
  • Safety Briefing – Rewards
  • Safety Briefings – Employee Involvement
  • Safety Briefings – Management’s leadership commitment to safety
  • Employees not clear what is being rewarded
  • Literacy and numeracy problems
  • No confidence to report after negative consequences or inaction previously
  • Team
  • Contractors
7. Monitor the reporting rates and reporting quality – review and refine the form and process as needed H&S coordinator Quarterly
  • Reporting data
  • Time
 
  • Team
  • Owner

What’s good about this plan?

It’s not rocket science

The problem is well understood.  There is an understanding of the specific things that need to be fixed.  The Snapshot helped red flag the area, but it was the follow up discussions and work that confirmed there was a problem, and identified some of the causes.

Spending time and involving the team to drill into what’s going wrong ensures the goals and actions focus on the right solutions. 

The goals are achievable and realistic.  This plan is not trying to change the world.  Rather it focuses on something that can be realistically delivered.  There is nothing more daunting than a plan that is 10 pages long and never seems to end.

The actions are simple and logical.  Actions are the small steps needed to achieve the goal.  They are each logical thing that someone will actually do – however small or obvious. 

A common mistake is to miss the baby steps and jump straight to the bigger actions.  But what needs to happen first, before the programme can be introduced?  There needs to be homework, a proposal needs to be developed, a meeting booked and the boss needs to make a decision.