July-August 2008

Job-Site Safety 101 What's New

Keeping a construction job site safe requires the right products and proceduresacknowledging that things can change from minute to minute.

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Safety First Sign

By Penelope Grenoble

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As one Dallas-based utility and excavation contractor put it, “Instead of making 20 phone calls and sending 20 e-mails to stay informed, I have a complete picture of the current status of all my projects, in real-time directly from my computer.”

According to John Poplawski, product development manager at William Frick & Co., radio-frequency identification (RFID) can take labor tracking another step, not only to identify employee location but also whether the right (trained and qualified, perhaps tested and screened) employee is on the job at the right time, operating the right piece of equipment. “Each employee is equipped with an RFID badge and passes through a job site portal that reads the badge. This allows a supervisor to view who’s where and what they’re doing via computer. The system also allows management to identify employees who enter a job site on a particular day, so should a catastrophic event take place, such as the collapse of the crane that occurred recently in New York City, they can do a head count. The entryway portal identifies who is on the site, who’s left for lunch, and who’s been there but is physically no longer on the premises.”

Frick & Co. specializes in RFID systems for harsh industrial environments, whether they’re used to track people or pieces of equipment. And while RFID might not be an idea whose time has come on some construction sites, Frick has a number of other safety-oriented products that help re-enforce Bennett’s concept of a coordinated safety program.

“We’ve done safety campaigns that have utilized custom posters of accidents which have occurred on a customer’s site. Blown up large, these high-impact graphics use actual photos of accidents involving a company’s employees to drive the messages home. We’ve added tabletop safety reminders for lunchrooms and labels that adhere in a truck to remind drivers to do their triple check. We coordinated personal pocket cards, which are the size of a credit card, that include important safety reminders, the kind of things that are easy to forget in an emergency when you don’t always think clearly. One of our most popular products is a label that’s curved to fit inside a hardhat where employees write their blood type and any medical conditions they feel are important. The field people like them because they feel management truly cares about what happens to them in emergency situations.

“The idea,” says Bennett, “is not to have one poster hanging up as the workers walk into their staging area but to have the message available in multiple areas as you would in an advertising or marketing campaign. And what you say also has to communicate personally with field personnel in a form that’s easy for them to access.”

When it comes to safety, says Reilly, “the bottom line is workman’s comp—the number of accidents a company has. No one’s going to hire a subcontractor that has a history of accidents, and a general contractor with a history of accidents and fatalities just won’t get the job. So it’s important to communicate safety to employees. Safety equipment manufacturers are always willing to come out and meet about what products are best for a site. If you have a school of safety near you, they’re always looking for places for students to intern. They’ll analyze your problems and design solutions. It’s a great way to put a safety program together.

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“We see a lot of construction companies going back to what we used to call tailgate safety meetings, where a supervisor talks to his crew about a specific subject. The idea is to get people in touch with where they are. You rush to work, you rush to get on the job site, but in your mind, you’re still in that argument you had before you left the house that morning or the date you had last night. So the idea is to stop everyone and say, ‘Let’s think about how you’re going to make it through the day and get home safely to your family.’”

Owens agrees. “We do safety meetings three times a week with our people. The first thing we talk about is awareness—‘Be aware of what’s going on around you all the time.’ All our employees, from the comptroller down to office staff, have to attend at least one safety meeting a month and at least one tailgate meeting a week. You’ve also got to stay on them to make sure they wear their safety shoes and glasses. We hammer every day on the safety vest, the personal protection equipment. But the most important thing is we watch out for each other. If somebody sees one of the guys doing something stupid, they say something. Because they know they’re going to get hurt.”

Author's Bio: Penelope Grenoble is a frequent contributor to environmental publications.

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