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Risk Management

Risk. Risk Management. Benefit. Purpose. Introduce the concept of risk management. References: FM 101-5, Appendix J http://safety.army.mil/. Task, Conditions, Standards. Task: Verify the implementation of the risk management process at company level.

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Risk Management

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  1. Risk Risk Management Benefit

  2. Purpose Introduce the concept of risk management • References: • FM 101-5, Appendix J • http://safety.army.mil/

  3. Task, Conditions, Standards Task: Verify the implementation of the risk management process at company level. Conditions: Given a scenario, with a complete risk management worksheet, in a classroom environment and student handouts. Standards: Make a written report that correctly identifies the hazards associated with the mission or task, the level of risk for each identified hazard, and the initial overall level of risk.

  4. Outline • What Risk Management • Why Risk Management • Definitions • The Risk Management process • Risk Management Integration • Risk Management Matrix • Video/Scenario • Summary • conclusion

  5. What is Risk Management? • Risk management is the best process for protecting the force. It provides a systematic, logical approach to identifying and controlling hazards that endanger our resources. Risk management supports and encourages initiative allowing flexibility, adaptability and eagerness to act. It is not just related to safety; it applies to all elements or force protection in all situations and environments

  6. Why Risk Management? • Preserve combat power • Because it works! - Dramatic decrease in accidents Army-wide • FY 96 Accident Rates Total Accident Rate 4.22 per 1000 soldiers record low according to Army Safety Center, Jan 97

  7. Key Definitions • Hazard – A condition with potential of causing injury to personnel, damage to equipment. • Risk – An expression of possible loss over a specific period of time or number of operational cycles. • Risk Assessment – The process of detecting hazards systematically assessing their overall risk • Gambling – The process of making risk decisions without apply the risk management process

  8. Key Definitions • Tactical Risk: Risk associated with hazards that exist because of the presence of the enemy or an adversary. • Accident Risk: Includes all operation risk considerations other than tactical risk, and can include activities associated with hazards concerning friendly personnel, equipment readiness, and environment conditions.

  9. Risk ManagementProcess • IDENTIFY HAZARDS • ASSESS HAZARDS • MAKE RISK DECISION/DEVELOP CONTROLS • IMPLEMENT CONTROLS • SUPERVISE

  10. The Process 2. Assess Hazards 3. Develop Controls 4. Implement controls RISK MANAGEMENT PROCESS 1. Identify Hazards 5. Supervise

  11. The Process • Step 1 - Identify Hazards: Consider all aspects of current and future situations, environment, and know historical problem areas. • Example of some Hazards: Time for mission prep & execution Terrain(rough, hills, swamp, etc Transportation to and from the operation site Skill level of personnel Intensity of operation(probability of taking shortcuts

  12. The Process • Step 2 – Assess Hazards: Assess hazards to determine their level of risk on the mission/task. Determine the initial overall level of risk. • Mission – routine, complex, “ no sweat” • Enemy – combat or training • Terrain – water, cliffs, swamps mountains • Troops – training, physical condition, sleep plans, morale • Time – adequate for planning, for the mission • Hill vs Mountain

  13. The Process • Step 3 – Develop controls: Decide what controls are needed to reduce the hazards. There will always be some element of risk; we can never completely eliminate it, but we must minimize risk by controlling all the elements that we can. • Reduce Risks • Modify plan • Modify Training • Inform the troops • Do mission benefits outweigh the risk • The senior leader makes the final decision on risk acceptance

  14. The Process • Step 4 – Implement Controls: Decide how each control will be put into effect or communicated. Implementing controls includes coordination and communication with superiors, subordinates, and individuals executing the mission/task. • Plans • SOPs • Standards • Rehearsals • Ensure all know the risk and how to avoid or reduce

  15. The Process • Step 5 – Supervise and Evaluate: • Ensure controls are working • Determine effectiveness • Safety performance during AAR • Improve controls as required

  16. Risk Management Integration The Next Generation • Embed RM in all Army does • Incorporates AAR • Were controls communicated? • Were controls implemented? • Was Risk Management effective? • Risk Management Integration Plan • Draft dated 24 Dec 97

  17. RISK ASSESSMENT MATRIX PROBABILITY FREQUENT LIKELY OCCASIONAL SELDOM UNLIKELY A B C D E I II III IV CATASTROPHIC CRITICAL MODERATE NEGLIGIBLE EXTREMELY EXTREMELY HIGH HIGH MEDIUM HIGH HIGH EXTREMELY HIGH HIGH MEDIUM LOW HIGH HIGH MEDIUM MEDIUM LOW LOW MEDIUM LOW LOW LOW LOW SEVERITY

  18. PROBABILITY A – FREQUENT = OCCURS OFTEN B – LIKELY = OCCURS FREQUENTLY C – OCCASIONAL = OCCURS SOMETIMES D – SELDOM – REMOTE OCCURRENCE E - UNLIKELY

  19. SEVERITY CATASTROPHIC – DEATH OR PERMANENT DISABILITY CRITICAL – TEMPORARY OR PARTIAL DISABILITY MODERATE – MINOR INJURY, LOST WORKDAYS NEGLIGIBLE – FIRST AID TREATMENT

  20. RISK LEVELS EXTREMELY HIGH – LOSS OF ABILITY TO ACCOMPLISH THE MISSION HIGH - SIGNIFICANTLY DEGRADES MISSION CAPABILITY MEDIUM – DEGRADES MISSION CAPABILITY LOW – LITTLE OR NO IMPACT TO MISSION CAPABILITY

  21. APPROVING AUTHORITY EXTREMELY HIGH – CG HIGH – BDE COMMANDER MEDIUM – BN COMMANDER LOW – CO COMMANDER

  22. RISK MANAGEMENT WORKSHEET • Task: Swamp/River Crossing 2. DTG BEGIN: 070700 3. DATE: • Operations END: 071200 12 Dec 02 • 4. Prepared By: SFC SMITH/PLATOON SERGEANT RANK/LAST NAME/DUTY POSITION 5. Hazards 6. Initial 7. Control 8. Residual 11. How to 12. How to 13.Controls Risk Risk Implement Supervise Effective Hypothermia (Exposure) EH Monitor water H SOP Direct Good and air temperatures Supv Non/weak swimmer EH Swimming classes H Rehearsals Direct Good Supv Fatigue H Enforce minimum M Rest Plan Direct Good rest periods during training 9. Overall Risk Level After controls are implemented (circle one) 10. Risk Decision Authority LOW MODERATE HIGH EXTREMELY HIGH COL I. M. King, BDE Commander Rank/Last Name/Duty Position

  23. SCENARIO Reducing the Risk in Training NOBODY’S FAULT VIDEO

  24. Summary • What Risk Management is • Why Risk Management is important • Definitions • The Risk Management process • Risk Management Integration • Risk Management Matrix • Video/Scenario Questions?

  25. Conclusion “Risk management helps us preserve combat power and retain the flexibility for bold and decisive action. Proper risk management is a combat multiplier that we can ill afford to squander….” General Reimer

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