SAFETY SOLUTIONS: The Safety Paradox
What happens if your company experiences a serious
injury to an employee? Usually, the management
commitment to a safe or safer work
environment is an immediate verbal commitment. How
long does the commitment last? Just until the workplace
chatter of the accident and the injured employee dies
down? Are there immediate workplace safety mitigation
projects that are funded with very few questions asked?
This scenario is too often true. It seems as though management
and employee willingness to participate in the
extra safety awareness efforts immediately following a
serious incident gradually fade. Pressing concerns of production
or financial viability take precedence, and it is a
challenge to maintain preventive efforts in an atmosphere
where concern gradually wanes until the next injury. Most
managers agree that this form of reactive management in
response to unpredictable events is not desirable and produces
a work environment where firefighting gets the
attention at the expense of long-range planning objectives.
A lot of money is spent trying to fix the problem, but
it cannot be fixed because it is not a problem, it is a paradox
or polarity, neither of which can be resolved, only
managed.
Paradoxes or polarities are sets of opposites that
appear to be in conflict, but are both needed for success.
Examples abound in safety—“cost effectiveness” versus
“preventive maintenance,” “planning” versus “getting the
work done.” A company cannot focus exclusively on one
and neglect the other without negative consequences.
Addressing polarities starts with being aware of them,
and acquiring the skills to discuss and balance these situations
so that an organization can enjoy safety and productivity,
quality and cost effectiveness. Facing polarity would
be easy if management were faced solely with choices
between wrong and right. Many times the choices management
faces are right and right and then the choices become more difficult. For example,
a company I worked with recently
experienced severe fire damage.
The plant manager decided to cancel
an important safety meeting due
to the fact the workers were working
an extensive amount of overtime
to try to get the plant back
into production mode. The safety
manager argued that the meeting
should have been held because
many of the risks to be addressed
would be even more prevalent during
the intense months of overtime
that were to follow. Who was right
in this scenario? Who was wrong? Is
there a simple answer? Is there one
judgment when no accidents happen,
and another if accidents do
happen? This polarity of task versus
safety creates the perception of a
moral and ethical conflict that leaders
often face. How they address
this dilemma influences the opinions
people hold of them. A leader
who communicates ethical responsibility
is viewed as inspiring, motivating
and caring; a leader who
does not is viewed less favorably.
The ability to understand and
explain polarities increases a
leader’s effectiveness in addressing
the underlying ethical and moral
dilemmas that so often cause conflict
between business and safety
priorities. This has significant implications
for the perception of management’s
commitment to safety.
Perception by employees of management’s
commitment to safety is
paramount. In numerous surveys
employees’ perception of management
is a strong commitment to
production, although when questioned,
management perceives
they are committed to safety over
production.
Perhaps the true source of failed
implementation and results is not
lack of management commitment,
but mismanaged polarities, misunderstanding
the phenomenon of
polarity itself, and the inability to
speak intelligently about the ethical
dilemmas underlying these
polarities. Polarities such as safety
versus production or quality versus
cost arise each day from all directions.
Addressing them starts with
being aware of polarity, and acquiring
the skills to discuss and balance
these situations so that an organization
can enjoy safety and productivity,
quality and cost-effectiveness.
Leaders who are able to talk
intelligently about the ethical
issues that underlie polarities are
better able to inspire and motivate
employee commitment to safety.
Organizations recognize that culture
is the most promising area to
focus on in order to improve performance.
Teaching the polarity
principle as part of safety leadership
development is a promising
strategy for addressing these cultural
issues.
Polarities are not problems that
can be solved and stay solved. Gray
areas such as balancing production
and safety must be addressed as
often as necessary. Leaders are the
catalyst to helping people accept
and manage the many conflicting
priorities while maintaining an
excellent safety record. Sound and
strong leadership is the resolution
of the safety paradox.
For more information, click on the author biography at the top of this page.
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