Tom,
Since every situation is unique, I won't take the 'this-is-what-you-
should-do-route'. I will, however, share what I went through when I
was wearing the same shoe type and size as you are right now.
My ex-boss once told me that H&S or EHS or HSE is rarely about the
technical stuff, but always about the 'people' stuff. At that time
Behaviour-based safety or People-based safety were not buzz-words, nor
did either (my boss and I) knew anything about the concept. This is
how he explained things to me at the time:
"Suppose that your (my in this case) brother is falsely accused of
being a shop-lifter. He was present in the store at the time that the
shop-lifting occured, was similar in height and age to the guy who
actually did steal, but was in the wrong place at the wrong time. The
police catch up with him from the CCTV camera footage, stand him up in
a line-up and the store rep immediately recognizes him and says 'Thats
him'!
Since you are the only one who can do anything for him (we're supposed
to be only 2 orphaned siblings in the story), you have to think of
something and do it quick before the police can make a case against
him and somehow send him to jail for 4 years."
My ex-boss then asked me:
Would you do anything (legal) to get him out of jail? I said,
ofcourse I will. And he said, "If you can do that, then you'd better
get this shop safety-ed up or your job is on the line". Not exactly
the pep talk you were looking for, but hear me out on this one.
Unless and until you realize (by you I mean any H&S rep) that the
people you are trying to convince are people, with real jobs, issues,
political agendas, etc., you're not going to be very successful at
what you do. Try and back down on telling people what to do - first
understand what they do, what their issues are, whether X department's
guys are not supporting the guy from the Y department, etc. Once (and
this will NOT take longer than a week) you have been able to
understand even what a single guy does, you can then try and help him
out in areas other than H&S. He can't get the tool issued from
stores because of some reason? You go to stores, butter up the
Manager, have the tool issued in your name, and give it to that
'single guy'. You might have to go out of your way for people to rely
on you - and they surely will. Once they're hooked, slip your arm on
the 'single guy's' shoulder and ask him to help you out in getting the
housekeeping done.
And that is how I learnt it. As an H&S rep, I was made to understand
that you cannot think of yourself as holier-than-thou, that you cannot
tell people that this is the way its supposed to be done and expect
things to happen, and that you will need to understand the business
and be able to talk-the-talk and walk-the-walk as some of the other
production guys (guys who make money for the company) to make it as a
successful resource.
Right now, think of yourself as a kid who has relocated to another
school mid-way through the academic year. However smart you may be,
you will need to make friends for the school to be remotely fun for
you. The day you start standing up for a friend, he is hooked. And
THEN you start selling safety.
Get to know who's wife is expecting, which school your colleague's
kids go to, whether anyone needs a ride home, whether there is
anything that you can do for anyone. H&S or any other support
function, will not work because of what you know - because some smart-
alec is always going to be there to try and pull the rug from under
your feet and embarass you - it will only work because of what you DO!
Best of luck buddy, we've all been there.
Salman
On Oct 28, 3:41 pm, "Mark Howarth" <
mark.howa...@flexicomms.com>
wrote:
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