What Do Security Contractors Do?
The enterprise manages the security aspects of any person (group) who works for it but is not directly employed by it.
Safety Management Contractor
Right!
- The enterprise manages the security aspects of any person (group) who works for it but is not directly employed by it.
- How to strengthen the safety management of contractors is a common problem facing enterprises. Poor contractor injury rate management can cost companies tens of millions of dollars each year. Contractor safety is transitive. In the actual operation process, understand how to hire safe contractors and subcontractors, and then guide the enterprise to work safely in specific work.
- Safety management contractor is a system management, in order to standardize the contractor's safety management behavior and prevent safety accidents during construction operations [1]
- In order to achieve this goal, it is more common in the market to learn from DuPont's six-step clear roadmap to improve the safety performance of contractors.
- The six work steps include:
- 1. Pre-assessment of contractors' past safety records
- 2. Let the contractor understand the company's security expectations and requirements
- 3. Carry out a comprehensive and effective evaluation of the contractor's safety specifications before the bidding stage and final accounts.
- 4. Safety training for contractor personnel
- 5. Review and monitor the work of the contractor for continuous improvement
- 6. Conduct regular performance assessments: including your performance and the performance of your contractors
- Step 1: Contractor selection
- Four criteria for a qualified contractor: 1. All workers' compensation payments in three years; 2. Injury and accident rates or the frequency of all recordable accidents; 3. Regulatory examples; 4. A safety capability assessment
- Avoid: 1. Appoint people lacking relevant skills to make decisions on selecting contractors; 2. Pay more attention to TRFR than security capabilities; 3. Select contractors based on low prices without assessing the contractor's safety qualifications for related work And ability
- Step 4: Safety-oriented training and instruction
- Must do
- 1. According to different characteristics, formulate the corresponding training content to make the contractor clear how to meet the safety requirements, and develop indicators to determine the degree of understanding of the contractor's safety expectations; 2. Select competent personnel for safety-oriented training. These personnel must: be familiar with contractors and contracts, be knowledgeable, experienced, and trustworthy, be able to impart information to solve difficult problems, and be able to regularly supervise the implementation of training programs
- can not do:
- 1. Provide "one-size-fits-all" safety-oriented training; 2. Take safety-oriented training as a burden; 3. Perfunct safety-oriented training; 4. Provide safety-oriented training unrelated to other steps in this process; 5. Choose incompetence People to conduct safety-oriented training and guidance; 6. Rigid monitoring steps to measure results; 7. Safety-oriented training and guidance as a single event rather than an ongoing effort
- Step 6: Standard tracking indicators
- Common indicators are: 1, the incidence of lost work events; 2, the incidence of restricted work events; 3, the rate of medical treatment incidents; 4, the incidence of first aid incidents; 5, accidents; 6, attempted incidents; 7, costs; 8, fine
- Also Includes: Recordable injury events including LWC, RWC & MTC
- LWC (Injury to Work) An event that cannot be performed as scheduled due to work injury or occupational illness.
- RWC (restriction of work event) An event that causes an employee to fail to perform part or most of his / her normal shift work or any subsequent full work scheduled for a work injury or illness
- MTC (Medical Treatment Incident) includes any event that requires medical staff's treatment, except for emergency events.
- Encourage reporting of first aid incidents FAC (Emergency Incidents) Encouraging reporting of first aid incidents is the discovery of potentially serious injuries for minor cuts, abrasions, burns, cracks, and other events that do not require medical treatment but require a one-time treatment and subsequent observation Important leading indicator of the event.