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Toolbox presentation: Role of safety and health representatives in investigations. October 2006. 3. What does the Act allow?. One of the statutory functions of a safety and health representative (SHR) is
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1. 1 Please read this before using presentation This presentation is based on content presented at the 2006 Mines Safety Roadshow held in October 2006
It is made available for non-commercial use (eg toolbox meetings) subject to the condition that the PowerPoint file is not altered without permission from Resources Safety
Supporting resources, such as brochures and posters, are available from Resources Safety
For resources, information or clarification, please contact:
ResourcesSafety@docep.wa.gov.au
or visit
www.docep.wa.gov.au/ResourcesSafety
2. Toolbox presentation: Role of safety and health representatives in investigations October 2006
3. 3 What does the Act allow? One of the statutory functions of a safety and health representative (SHR) is ‘… in the event of an accident, a dangerous occurrence, or a risk of imminent and serious injury to, or imminent and serious harm to the health of, any person, immediately to carry out an appropriate investigation in respect of the matter …’ (s. 53(1)(b), Mines Safety and Inspection Act 1994).
4. 4 What is appropriate for an SHR? Safety and health representatives may not have investigative experience
Not all safety and health representatives will want to be involved in an investigation
It may be difficult for non-specialists to appreciate the role of human behaviour in accident or incident causation
A good accident or incident investigation compares what should have happened with what actually happened to identify areas that need changing
Aim is to prevent a recurrence of the accident or incident
5. 5 Running the practical investigation Scope largely depends on seriousness and/or complexity of accident/incident
Legal restrictions – it is an offence to:
disturb the site of a serious accident without the authority of the District Inspector of Mines
disturb the site of a fatality without the authority of the Coroner
An inspector may request that a safety and health representative participates in the inspector’s own investigation
Safety and health representatives may be included in an employer’s investigation but are also able to conduct their own investigation
6. 6 Principles of investigation The most important processes are:
observation
information
interrogation
The standard of investigation will depend on the skills and persistence of the investigator
Luck plays a part – but is often nothing more that a combination of opportunity and preparation
Investigation requires:
induction – assembling available evidence
deduction – derive solutions to problems, answers to questions
7. 7 Principles of investigation continued Aim is to search for truth in order to prevent further harm
Investigator is collector of evidence – facts must present their own conclusions
The shorter the time between the event and investigation, the better the prospects of a satisfactory outcome
Write notes as you go – if it’s worth a mental note then it’s worth a written note
Physical evidence is real evidence and not subject to the vagaries of human memory
8. 8 Principles of investigation continued The evidence of witnesses is subject to human frailty – obtain corroboration if possible
Science and technology are aids to, and not substitutes for investigation – submit physical evidence to experts
Cultivate and nurture all sources of information that may assist
9. 9 What to look for during an investigation Focus on causes – not blame
Focus on causes – not injury
Building the chain of events:
Events leading up to the incident
Facts of the incident itself
Facts concerning what occurred immediately after the incident
Essential factors and causes
Design components
Environmental components
Behavioural components
10. 10 Checklist to establish facts Who
What
When
Why
Where
How
I kept six honest serving men
They taught me all I knew
Their names were WHAT and WHY and WHEN
And WHERE and HOW and WHO
Rudyard Kipling
11. 11 What should the report provide? Accurate, clear and complete information including:
Description of sequence of events leading to accident/incident
Correct identification of all causal factors
Description of all causal factors
Corrective actions already taken
Further recommendations for corrective actions
Proper review
Timeliness
12. 12 Resource material See Resources Safety’s publication for safety and health representatives on investigating incidents