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Episode 24 - Safety Inspections

Episode 24 Published 3 years, 3 months ago
Description

Episode 24 breaks down the purpose, process, and leadership expectations behind safety inspections. Dr. Ayers explains that inspections are not about “finding fault” or “checking boxes” — they are a proactive hazard‑identification tool that strengthens systems, prevents incidents, and builds trust when done correctly.

The core message: Safety inspections should focus on finding hazards, not finding people doing something wrong.

  🧭 Why Safety Inspections Matter

Dr. Ayers highlights that effective inspections:

  • Identify hazards before they cause injuries

  • Reinforce safe behaviors and expectations

  • Provide real‑time feedback on system performance

  • Build relationships between supervisors and employees

  • Support continuous improvement

  • Demonstrate leadership commitment to safety

Inspections are a cornerstone of a proactive safety culture.

  🧱 What Safety Inspections Should Look For

Episode 24 emphasizes that inspections must go beyond housekeeping and PPE checks. Strong inspections evaluate:

• Physical hazards

Machine guarding, slip/trip hazards, electrical issues, fall protection, ergonomics.

• Behavioral elements

Safe work practices, use of procedures, communication, situational awareness.

• System weaknesses

Missing procedures, unclear expectations, inadequate training, poor maintenance.

• Environmental conditions

Lighting, ventilation, noise, temperature, chemical storage.

• Equipment condition

Preventive maintenance, wear and tear, missing components.

The goal is to understand how work is actually being done — not how it looks on paper.

  🧰 Key Principles of Effective Safety Inspections   🟦 1. Be Consistent and Predictable

Regular inspections build routine and trust. Inconsistent inspections send mixed messages.

  🟩 2. Engage Employees During the Inspection

Ask questions like:

  • “What makes this task difficult?”

  • “What hazards do you see here?”

  • “What would make this safer?”

Employee involvement improves accuracy and ownership.

  🟧 3. Focus on Systems, Not Blame

If a worker is doing something unsafe, ask:

  • Why is this happening?

  • What system allowed this?

Most unsafe behaviors are symptoms of system gaps.

  🟥 4. Document and Track Findings

Inspections must lead to action. Tracking ensures hazards are corrected and not forgotten.

  🟫 5. Follow Up and Close the Loop

Employees need to see that their concerns matter. Closing the loop builds credibility and trust.

  ⚠️ Common Mistakes Highlighted in the Episode

Dr. Ayers calls out several pitfalls that weaken inspection programs:

  • Treating inspections as a “gotcha” exercise

  • Only looking for PPE or housekeeping issues

  • Failing to involve employees

  • Not correcting hazards promptly

  • Ignoring system‑level causes

  • Using inspections to punish instead of improve

  • Not documenting or tracking findings

These mistakes create fear, silence, and disengagement.

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways
  • Inspections are a learning tool, not an enforcement tool

  • Leaders must model curiosity, not criticism

  • Employee involvement strengthens accuracy and engagement

  • System‑level thinking prevents repeat hazards

  • Follow‑up is essential for credibility

  • Inspections should reinforce a culture of openness and improvement

The episode’s core message: Safety inspections are most effective when they focus on understanding work, identifying hazards, and improving systems — not catching people doing som

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