Interlocked projects in safety competency and safety effectiveness indicators in the construction sector

Saturday, 02/12/2023, 10:19(GMT +7)

Herbert C. Biggs, Sarah E. Biggs
Safety culture is a concept that has long been accepted in high risk industries such as aviation, nuclear industries and mining, however, considerable research is now also being undertaken within the construc-tion sector.

This paper discusses three recent interlocked projects undertaken in the Australian construc-tion industry. The first project examined the development and implementation of a safety competency framework targeted at safety critical positions (SCP’s) across first tier construction organisations. Com-bining qualitative and quantitative methods, the project: developed a matrix of SCP’s (n = 11) and safety management tasks (SMTs; n= 39); mapped the process steps for their acquisition and development; detailed the knowledge, skills and behaviours required for all SMTs; and outlined potential organisational cultural outcomes from a successful implementation of the framework. The second project extended this research to develop behavioural guidelines for leaders to drive safety culture change down to second tier companies and to assist them to customise their own competency framework and implementation guide-lines to match their aspirations and resources. The third interlocked project explored the use of safety effectiveness indicators (SEIs) as an industry-relevant assessment tool for reducing risk on construction sites. With direct linkages to safety competencies and SMT’s, the SEIs are the next step towards an inte-grated safety cultural approach to safety and extend the concept of positive performance indicators (PPIs) by providing a valid, reliable, and user friendly measurement platform. Taken together, the results of the interlocked projects suggest that industry engaged collaborative safety culture research has many poten-tial benefits for the construction industry.

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Source: Safety Science 52 (2013)


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