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Published byCamilla Ball Modified over 9 years ago
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Proton Source, Feb 4 th, 2005 - Prebys 1 Why are we talking about safety? Roger told me to. We want you to be safe! Nothing we do here is worth anyone getting hurt!! SLAC just had a very bad experience. Severe electrical injury Investigation totally blasted the lab’s safety policies Still not back in operation. We don’t want OSHA to regulate us. Must rank on top 10% of government laboratories
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Proton Source, Feb 4 th, 2005 - Prebys 2 Reportable Injuries An injury is “reportable” if It requires a medical procedure, like sutures It requires any prescription medication (including prescription strength versions of OTC drugs) Any work time is lost or restricted “Reportable” is “reportable” No accounting for severity No accounting for whether or not any mistakes were made or rules broken. Figure of merit: Reportable injuries per 200,000 man hours (100 man years). Goal: 1 in FY05,.75 in FY06 For our department, that’s on injury per 3 (4) years. For comparison, the average rate in an administrative office is 3.7
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Proton Source, Feb 4 th, 2005 - Prebys 3 Two example from NuMI Case A: Worker illegally modified an air hose fitting for a pneumatic tool (contract agreement clearly states no field-modified equipment). The coupling broke loose and the hose hit the man in the head, requiring several stitches He was knocked to the ground, injuring his knee Case B: A worker was indoors during a lightening storm standdown. The worker was wearing safety goggles, even though he wasn’t working, nor was there any work going on in the area. A piece of dust blew around the side of the goggles and got in the person’s eye, causing irritation. Medical flushed the eye and prescribed a prescription ointment, making it reportable. In DOE counting, these two cases are exactly the same Using this accounting, an office is more dangerous than a coal mine!
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Proton Source, Feb 4 th, 2005 - Prebys 4 What You Can Do These rates are basically consistent with “unavoidable” injuries (e.g. tripping while just walking down a hallway), so there’s no margin for error. Our goal must be NO preventable injuries. Always take the time to do the job safely. Always keep an eye on each other. Tell someone if you think they are doing something in an unsafe way. Inform me immediately of any safety concerns you might have, no matter how minor. Finally, WE ARE NOT ENCOURAGING YOU TO LET PROBLEMS GO UNREPORTED TO KEEP OUR NUMBERS DOWN
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