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Small to Medium Sized Shipyard Challenges & Opportunities

Small to Medium Sized Shipyard Challenges & Opportunities. Teresa Preston OSHA Small Business Forum September 14, 2007. Outline. What is a “small” shipyard? What is a “medium” shipyard? Management Commitment Employee Involvement Worksite Analysis Training Hazard Prevention & Control.

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Small to Medium Sized Shipyard Challenges & Opportunities

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  1. Small to Medium Sized Shipyard Challenges & Opportunities Teresa Preston OSHA Small Business Forum September 14, 2007

  2. Outline • What is a “small” shipyard? • What is a “medium” shipyard? • Management Commitment • Employee Involvement • Worksite Analysis • Training • Hazard Prevention & Control

  3. What is a “small” Shipyard? • Single Owner (often family-owned) • < 500 employees • Usually fills a niche market (i.e. barges, tugs, rig support vessels, etc.) • Locations often have been industrial for over 50 years (Environmental history)

  4. Steiner Shipyard, Inc.

  5. What is a ‘medium” Shipyard? • Usually Private owner (single, family, private equity firm) • 500-1500 employees • Mixed market, commercial/government • Locations have often been industrialized for many years • Often “large” local” employer, but small by shipyard standards

  6. Atlantic Marine Alabama

  7. Management Commitment Single Owner/private firm Advantages/Opportunities • Flat Management system • Private/family-owned • Owner/President often is also EHS/HR • EHS reports to the top • Immediate response • Excellent employee access • Personal bias/fears • Training/expertise/focus lacking • Can make decisions quickly

  8. ORA Kick-Off President McAlear and V.P. Williams attended every ORA training session unless they were on travel

  9. Employee Involvement Traits Advantages/Opportunities • Many long-term employees • Family atmosphere • Management Access • “We’ve always…” • Comfortable approaching management • They “look out” for each other • Easy to arrange feedback • President/VP kick-off training sessions

  10. Employee Recognition – Timely, Appropriate Employee recognized for Good Samaritan acts for a contractor who had a heart attack in his truck.

  11. Worksite Analysis Traits Advantages/Opportunities • Old sites, up to 100+ years • Small EHS staff, if any • Environmental “sins” of the past • Need to remove “blinders” • MUST guard against putting production first-SAFE PRODUCTION a MUST • Budget constraints

  12. Employees need to be trained to recognize hazards in their work areas

  13. Training Traits Advantages/Opportunities • Specialized work and workforce • High turnover • Staff/budget constraints • Maritime EHS pre-packaged training unavailable • Many specialized reqts • Hard to schedule to ensure compliance • Outsource training - $$$$

  14. Using Outside Resources for Emergencies requires coordinating training and drills

  15. Hazard Abatement & Prevention Traits Advantages/Opportunities • Tools/equipment that require retrofit guarding • Specialized worksites • Small EHS staff • Tools/equipment that require retrofit guarding • Regulators don’t know the differences • Must outsource services such as IH, Emergency Response, etc.

  16. Working on a large semi-submersible rig

  17. Challenges • Regulated like the big dogs • Lack of understanding of processes and specialized regulations by the regulators • Lack of understanding of reasoning behind regulations by business owners • Resources available to small businesses often untapped

  18. Overcoming obstacles • Trade Organizations pool knowledge, open doors to regulators, keep track of changing regulations, advocate for us • Local EHS Organizations (GCMSA, VSRA, etc.) • OSHA Outreach tools • OSHA Alliances, EPA Sector Strategies • VPP & SHARP Mentors

  19. Investing in Culture Change • ORA program • Leadership Training • Teambuilding • Follow-up and follow-through • Safety & Hazard Control Committee • RCCA’s (Root Cause, Corrective Action Meetings) • Focus Sessions • Employee Trainers

  20. Questions?

  21. OSHA’s Small Business Forum, Washington DC, September 14, 2007 September 14, 2007 James R. Thornton Director, Environmental, Health and Safety Northrop Grumman Corporation

  22. Even a Bear Can Do It…..

  23. ANCHOR CHAIN

  24. ANCHOR CHAIN

  25. ANCHOR LIFT AND WEAPONS ELEVATOR

  26. BOW LIFT

  27. BUSH PROPELLOR

  28. CARRIER CONSTRUCTION

  29. CARRIER CONSTRUCTION

  30. CARRIER CONSTRUCTION

  31. CARRIER CONSTRUCTION

  32. CARRIER CONSTRUCTION

  33. CATAPULT WORK

  34. WELDING AND FLOATING DRYDOCK

  35. GRINDING

  36. HULL PAINTING AND ZENITH PROPELLER

  37. MIG WELDERS

  38. PAINTING AND X36 RIGGERS

  39. PIPEFITTERS

  40. PROPELLER INSTALL AND SHAFT SUPPORT

  41. PROPELLER AND SHAFT

  42. RIGGER WINCH AND RUDDER INSTALL

  43. TEXAS CONSTRUCTION

  44. TIG WELDER

  45. USS RONALD REAGAN, PEARL HARBOR, 6/28/06

  46. USS LOS ANGELES, 12/7/06

  47. Why Have H&S Program? • It is it required by law • It’s good for the business - worker’s comp costs - productivity, quality, etc, but….. • It’s good for the employees - morale (they care about me) - families like it • It is the right thing to do

  48. Why Go For H&S Culture Change (VPP)? • Reduces Injury Rates and Costs • Stimulates Culture Change (if it is needed) • Improves Visibility of H&S Program • Improves Relationship with Union(s) • Enhances Relationship with OSHA

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