Sunday, October 26, 2008

Green Building for Building Professionals in KC November 20 & 21

The Green Building for Building Professionals Course will be offered by the HBA of Greater Kansas City on November 20 and 21, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The cost of the course is $325 for HBA members. As well, Business Management for Building Professionals will be offered on November 19 for a cost of $180 for HBA members. For more information, contact Lonny at the HBA of Greater KC, 816-733-2221.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Safety Pays for Everyone

By Mike Mulhall, Director of Occupational Programs
Safety Council of the Ozarks

Why should you put the effort into improving workplace safety and health?
Work-related injuries, illnesses and deaths are costly to everyone. A safe and healthy work environment pays, in more ways than one. In Missouri each year about 19,000 workers lose time from work because of job-related injury or illness. The National Safety Council estimates the average cost of a lost-time injury to be $78,000 in 2006.

That's $877,000,000 wasted each year in Missouri alone. At $540 billion a year nationwide, the direct and indirect costs of work injuries and illnesses equal those of cancer, according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

These are only financial costs. There's no way to know the value of the quality of life lost to injuries and illnesses. Work injuries and illnesses can affect every aspect of life for workers and their families. For workers, injuries or illnesses can cause:
•Loss of life,
•Pain and suffering,
•Loss of income/financial well-being,
•Stress on relationships,
•Loss of job or career,
•Health-care costs beyond coverage.
Workers may also suffer from low self-esteem, loss of independence, mental health problems, other medical problems, and damaged relationships.

For employers a safe and healthy workplace not only protects workers from injury and illness, it can also lower injury/illness costs, reduce absenteeism and turnover, increase productivity and quality, and raise employee morale. In other words, safety is good for business. Plus, protecting workers is the right thing to do. We have maintenance and care programs for our expensive production machinery should we not have as much concern for our human capital?

Employers can save $4.00 to $6.00 for every dollar spent on a safety and health program. Workplaces with successful safety and health management systems reduce injury and illness costs 20-40%, according to OSHA. For a small to moderate sized construction company, one injury can mean financial disaster. Costs to business include:
•Production losses
•Wages for work not performed
•Increased workers' compensation
insurance costs
•Damage to equipment or machinery
•Hiring and/or training new employees
•Decline in quality/worker morale
•Decline in worker morale
•High turnover and lost work time


The cost of worksite injuries, illnesses and deaths is much greater than the cost of workers' compensation insurance alone. Insurance is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to these costs. Anyone that has ever taken a cost benefit analysis class realizes that the cost of prevention is far smaller than the costs of a reactive fix.

Safety Pays for Everyone
The cost of injury prevention is far less than the cost of an injury. A safe and healthy workplace attracts and retains quality employees. Keep in mind the indirect cost of replacing a seasoned employee. Characteristics of safe and healthy workplaces:
•Have more satisfied, productive workers who
•Produce higher quality products and services
•Return to work more quickly after an injury or illness
•Feel loyal to the organization
•Are better places to work
•Retain employees
•Establish positive community
relations

It's an asset to a community and attracts more quality employees, operates more efficiently and enjoys a healthy bottom line. The business and the workers thrive in a safe, healthy, respectful and caring environment.

Dr. W. Edwards Demmings, the founder of quality management, made the statement that satisfied workers are more innovative and productive workers. We often look at the bottom line and compare that to the quality or quantity of safety we provide. The businesses that get it: Safety Pays, are those businesses that will survive and thrive, even in years of uncertainly.