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This material is for training purposes only to inform the reader of occupational safety and health best practices and general compliance requirements and is not a substitute for provisions of the OSH Act of 1970 or any governmental regulatory agency.


    INTRODUCTION

Introduction

The supervisor is the one person who can take immediate, direct action to make sure that his or her work area is safe and healthful for all employees. Russell DeReamer, author of Modern Safety Practices, considers the supervisor the only person who can control employees, machines, and working conditions on a daily, full-time basis.

In his text, Occupational Safety and Health Management, Thomas Anton relates that the supervisor bears the greatest responsibility and accountability for implementing the safety and health program because it is he or she who works most directly with the employee. It is important that the supervisor understand and apply successful management and leadership principles to safety and health to make sure employees enjoy an injury- and illness-free work environment.

This course introduces you to key elements of that help the supervisor demonstrate "5-STARS" leadership in supervision of the safety and health function. The key F-STARS leadership areas are:

Supervision - overseeing work activities to make sure employees are safe

Training - conducting safety education and training

Accountability - insisting everyone complies with company safety policies and rules

Resources - providing physical resources - tools, equipment, materials, etc. so employees can work safely.

Support - creating a psychological environment - schedules, workloads, recognition, etc. so employee do not work under undue stress.

Supervisors can demonstrate leadership by directly providing employees the resources, motivation, priorities, and accountability for ensuring their safety and health. Enlightened supervisors understand the value in creating and fostering a strong safety culture within their department. Safety is elevated so that it is a value as opposed to something that must be done or accomplished. Integrating safety and health concerns into the everyday supervision allows for a proactive approach to accident prevention and demonstrates the importance of working safety.

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