|
Reprint from Occupational Health
& Safety Magazine

Don't Reward
The Safety Cover-up
Use your incentive program to encourage workers to
report accidents and unsafe practices.
By Buck Peavey
It was Thursday, 3:50 p.m. Will Hudson was cleaning
up his work area and putting away tools in the warehouse, preoccupied
with thoughts of returning home to his wife's silent treatment.
"How can she call me a chauvinist," he thought, "when
it's her mother who
."
"Hey Will!" someone shouted from behind
the lift truck. As Will turned to answer the voice, an excruciating
pain from his right hand shot through his entire body. Will hid
his hand in his shirt, excused himself and sped calmly to the restroom.
Once behind closed doors, he took a closer look. The knife cut ran
down his palm, bleeding badly and hurting worse. Could he go back
to work?
Will had the following choices: Try to stop the
bleeding and endure the pain for the next hour, fake a family emergency
and head out the gate, or head for the company medical office. The
medical office would report the incident as an accident, though.
That report would mean that the other nine people in his department
would fall short of receiving their 10,000 bonus-incentive-award
points by two working days. Will couldn't stand the thought of disappointing
his co-workers; therefore, he washed his hands and covered the injured
hand with his bandana. He went back to his station, where he finished
his cleanup work and discarded the knife.
Will slept poorly that night. He worked Friday,
but spent most of Monday in the doctor's office with a fever and
infection because he failed to get treatment for his wound.
The accident may have happened anyway, but who or
what caused the most pain and expense? It could easily have been
the wording in the company's safety incentive rules or the "spirit/intent"
in the structure of the safety program.
Safety-incentive
programs can and should offer rewards for fewer
lost-time accidents, but they must be careful to place the emphasis
on
individual performance and make group results secondary.
We all know the tremendous value people place on
acceptance by their co-workers. Every firm and department benefits
greatly by these good relationships. Respect, cooperation and carnaraderie
are the glue that keeps industry moving despite burnout and sometimes
seemingly unfair management decisions. Safety directors must be
careful not to take advantage of this precious principle, not to
overuse it to the detriment of the whole group.
Safety-incentive programs can and should offer rewards
for fewer lost-time accidents, but they must be careful to place
the emphasis on individual performance and make group results secondary.
Peer pressure is a powerful tool when used in an incentive program;
but it must be applied carefully, thoughtfully and with open communication
among each and every participant.
It's a Coaching Job
Safety directors are coaches, and a good coach develops a written
or unwritten pledge of team loyalty, committing each player to the
understanding that accidents will happen to anyone. As in football,
blocks will be missed, passes will be dropped, but the team refocuses
on the next play.
A correctly designed safety-incentive program permits
or rewards "reportables" while giving bonuses for fewer
lost-time accidents. Here are examples of how some people have worded
their program rules:
A Coca-Cola bottling company -- "Employees
involved in an incident may receive a 'Safety Jackpot' game card
(incentive point award vehicle) for an acceptable safety suggestion
relating to the unsafe act that resulted in their incident."
A major hazardous waste company -- "Game cards will
be earned for reporting an injury sustained at work." But also,
"A bonus of one additional game card will be given to all employees
in a division that has no reportable accidents during a calendar
year."
A subsidiary of Union Carbide -- "We placed a special
emphasis on rewarding employees game cards for reporting incidents,
especially near misses."
A major medical care facility -- "Our goal is to create
safety awareness and eliminate serious injuries, not to prevent
the reporting of accidents/injuries. If you have a cut and need
a couple of stitches you should be able to go to the emergency room
department without the fear of punitive judgement. And, we would
rather see our employees receive a prize bonus than apply the money
to our workers' compensation insurance carrier."
Proactive Behaviors
I recommend that emphasis be placed on proactive safety behaviors,
rather than limiting awards for not having lost-time accidents.
Keep in mind you never get good results without giving something
in return. Awarding for proactive behaviors usually means more tracking,
more measuring and more administration on someone's part. Perhaps
some of your key employees would volunteer to help in this process.
Tracking proactive behaviors means identifying people who:
Make a weekly safety suggestion.
Complete X percent or higher on a safety quiz.
Report a near miss.
Attend a safety education or training class.
Volunteer to work on your safety administration team.
Tracking accident-prevention activities means
identifying people who:
Don't have a safety infraction.
Wear their hard hats.
Wear steel-toed shoes.
Honk the horn on the forklift at corners.
Flexibility
Maintaining the proper balance between individual awarding and group
awarding and maintaining the proper balance between prevention awards
and "numbers" awards requires flexibility. Companies have
their own cultures and will operate best under a set of award guidelines
tailored by their safety directors. Unfortunately, even safety directors
are not psychologists. One suggestion is to write the criteria for
the short term and let it be known that rules for points or game
cards, etc. may be adjusted as the program progresses.
Essentials for Success
- Make sure your program
rules are tailored to your needs and to your group.
- Make sure management is
committed and involved.
- Create an exciting theme
and communicate it through posters, stickers, specialties, newsletters,
award ceremonies, games, and so forth.
- Design a program that stimulates
interaction, not competition, among employees. For example, encourage
trade and exchange of points or game cards to improve winning
potential.
- Be prepared in advance to
alter or change the theme or program once per year to maintain
maximum interest.
A safety incentive program is not a cure-all, but
it must be part of a campaign that runs parallel to safety education
and training. It must be directed at prevention of accidents, not
punishment after an accident occurs. It must be a campaign to develop
trust between management and producer; a campaign to make your company
a fun place to work; a campaign to treat every employee in the same
way you would treat your company's best customer. The safety incentive
program should also inform your employees about your company's mission,
values, goals and, if possible, its financial results.
When you have this kind of culture, you don't have
to worry about people not reporting accidents and incidents. The
good feelings and trust will tell them the right thing to do.
Reprint from Occupational Health &
Safety.
Buck Peavey is president of Peavey Performance Systems, Lenexa.
Kansas.
Back to Top
|