1. The document discusses driving safety best practices and performance for construction contractors and subcontractors in Saudi Arabia. It identifies the top 5 safety violations, including speeding and reckless driving.
2. It emphasizes the importance of managing contractor safety and outlines several strategies for doing so, such as including safety rules in contracts, conducting inductions and inspections, and establishing a reward and consequences system.
3. Regular Health, Safety and Environment steering committee meetings between main contractors and subcontractors are recommended to collaboratively address safety issues, set expectations, and monitor performance through leading and lagging indicators.
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Eyad Sallam International IFSEC and OSH Arabia conference presentation
1. Construction Contractors/Subcontractors
Driving Safety Best
Practices and
Performance
Tuesday December 11, 2012
Presented by: Eyad Sallam
Divisional QHSE Manager / Leighton MiddleDecember 2012 | 1
Habtoor Leighton Group |
East
2. HLG
One of the leading diversified international construction groups in the Middle
East and North Africa
The largest construction group in the UAE
The Group employs around 25,000 people, including labour
Part of the Leighton Group, Australia‟s largest project development and
contracting group
In the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, HLG operates as Leighton Middle East
“Occupational Health and Safety is a priority for HLG and we are committed to
providing a safe, healthy and positive working environment for all our employees
and those under our care.”
Habtoor Leighton Group | December 2012 | 2
3. Top 5 Safety Violations by Contractors in KSA
1. Speeding and Reckless Driving ( No. 1 fatalities)
2. Guardrails not provided at open-sided floors or platforms or no protection
system on excavation (No. 2 fatalities)
3. Personal protective equipment not used
4. Poor housekeeping
5. Poorly maintained heavy earth moving equipment
Source : World Health Organization 2011 Report.
We all have an important role to play in working with contractors and
subcontractors to educate them on best practice solutions and establish practices
to safeguard against violations.
Habtoor Leighton Group | December 2012 | 3
4. Highlights: Keys to success
Realizing the costs of poor safety
Steps to reduce the impact of poor safety
Controlling contractor‟s safety
Working collaboratively
The Health Safety and Environment (HSE) Committee Meeting
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5. Realizing the costs of poor safety: Costs
Direct costs associated with contractor non-compliance:
– Lost time for injured employees
– Lost crew time resulting from disruptions
– Damaged equipment, material
– Investigation costs
– Low productivity
Compensation (medical & wages) + Actual Costs (lost time, fines,
management and additional training) = hundreds of thousands of riyals.
Habtoor Leighton Group | December 2012 | 5
6. Reducing the impact of poor safety
Management can reduce the cost impact of subcontractors:
– during the bid period (e.g. mandating safety items cost to bear)
– before subcontract work begins (e.g. training and induction)
– while on-site (audits, reward and discipline program, on-the-job training)
– before completion (site readiness, no hazards, etc.)
The importance of having a good written program, including:
– Safety Policy
– Bid & Contractor Evaluation System
– Kick-off & Orientation Program
– Auditing Program
– Pro-active involvement
– Discipline & reward
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7. Controlling contractor’s safety
Add safety rules in contract and get the subcontractor to sign an addendum
Safety plan for entire site
Presence of a competent person in charge of jobsite safety
Site HSE induction
Special current emphasis areas, such as driving safety, fall protection,
excavations, PPE, housekeeping, safe systems of work
Weekly jobsite safety meetings
Reward and Consequences system
Use of behavioral safety program Joint site safety inspections regularly
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8. Working collaboratively
Stress HSE goals and expectations,
document, mutually agree on them
and communicate them
Include contractors in site audits
When you audit contractors, explain
the audit is a win-win process
Treat contractors like your own
employees
Praise and reward
If you apply penalties, apply it
according to pre-agreed contract
clauses rather than case-to-case or as
the project or safety manager wishes
Habtoor Leighton Group | December 2012 | 8
9. The HSE Steering Meeting
HSE Steering Meetings are coordinated by a „Safety Champion‟ who is
an elected HSE representative of the contractor
They are held regularly and senior representatives from the main
contractor and subcontractor includes:
– Senior management
– Health & safety manager
– Human resources
– Line management ( construction and project managers).
It is a motivating meeting, with a positive safety message, where
contractors are encouraged to chair the meeting and contribute to the
meeting agenda
The agenda is sent to the contractor‟s representative/s in advance, and
upon start of meeting, a business case is presented
After the meeting, a site visit is organized to conduct joint HSE audit
along with contractor and come up with a common action plan to
remediate any non-compliances found
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10. The role of the Safety Champion
At the first meeting, the contractor‟s HSE representative is appointed by the
steering meeting members as the elected safety champion who will:
Call for the next meetings
Organises and facilitates meetings
Documents decisions and communicate minutes of meeting
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11. Typical Steering Meeting agenda
Planning for new activities, including risk assessments
HSE Policy Statement is circulated. Are we following it?
Implementing the HSE plan – obstacles and suggested remedies
Effectiveness of HSE training program for new employees
Reporting unsafe acts and accident prevention program
Project HSE responsibilities
Transparency & no blame culture
PPE compliance
Motor vehicle and driving safety rules/policies
Fall protection
Joint HSE audits
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12. Sample Business Case
Employee commitment to work
Review of existing safety operational controls
Staff performance and productivity
LTIs (Lost time incidents) and levels of near misses and mitigation
measures
Staff HSE induction
HSE Plan implementation
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13. Benefits of HSE Steering Meetings
Agreed methods of communication:
– Telephone and fax lines
– Notice boards
– Email
– Individual memos and letters
Increased commitment from contractor on HSE matters
Reduced LTI (Lost time incidents)
Easier and quicker responses to requests for HSE inductions
Generation of more leading indicators ( like prompt elimination of unsafe
acts before they become incidents)
Long term relationship and more potential for prequalification of
contractor for future jobs
Increased productivity
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14. Impressions of HSE Steering Meetings
The Trust now expects managers to thank staff
These initiatives require managers to take ownership of their staff
This has been a positive experience for all involved
The efforts of effective HSE management on site would have been very
slow without these meetings
Contractors have been given a voice and the opportunity to use it
As a client, we have already seen an increase in staff motivation and a
decrease in Lost time Incidents reduction
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15. Best practice examples
Contractor safety doesn‟t happen from behind a desk. Observe
contractors in their work areas and engage them in discussions about
their safety programs and procedures
– Leadership needs to be visible on the front line
– Questions asked by leaders set the tone for whats important in terms of safety
Build main contractor capability by training them on how to conduct
contractor safety reviews and engage more effectively with their
subcontractors
– Make sure the main contractor has the capacity to spend adequate time with their
contractors
– Opportunity to solve safety issues in a collaborative way
– Build trust between the main contractor and their subcontractors
Have simple action tracking tools and regular contractor meetings to
review how well performance gaps are being closed.
– Create leading and lagging indicators based on the interactions of the contractor and the
contract holder
– Have a clear CSMP governance process at the local level
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16. Overview of International Occupational
Safety Standards
Saudi Arabia construction contractors and regulatory authorities may benchmark with best
international occupational safety standard, these include:
International Labour Organization Standards:
http://www.ilo.org/global/standards/
European health and safety legislation:
https://osha.europa.eu/en/legislation/index_html
British Standards:
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/ohindex.htm
OHSAS 18001:2004 : Occupational Safety Management Systems Standard
American health and safety standards:
www.osha.gov
ISO Organization ( ISO 14001:2004 Environmental management systems standard)
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