Environmental liability exposures refer to the legal and financial responsibilities organizations incur when their operations harm the environment. Environmental contamination can arise from many sources, adversely affecting air, water, soil, and natural resources. Pollution incidents may also pose risks to human health, potentially causing illness or injury if people come into contact with hazardous substances.
Following contamination incidents, companies may be obligated to remedy, mitigate, and compensate for the harm caused. Growing litigation risks and a heightened environmental awareness among regulators and the public are driving greater scrutiny of business operations and increasing the potential consequences of environmental mismanagement.
Fortunately, organizations can reduce their exposure to environmental liabilities through robust environmental insurance and risk management practices. This post discusses common sources of environmental liability and outlines several steps organizations can take to limit their exposure.
There are five elementary steps to improving the risk profile, including establishing a well-rounded safety program that creates a safe work environment, meets OSHA requirements, reduces accidents, and ultimately lowers workers’ compensation costs. These include the following:
Many incidents stem from poorly developed or poorly implemented safety and health programs. For example, failure to keep walking and working surfaces clear may result in slips or trips. Not using personal protective equipment may result in excessive lacerations. Poor lifting techniques can result in strains.
Many OSHA standards require the development and communication of a written program to employees. Experience shows that companies with thoroughly developed OSHA-compliant programs reduce their risk profile and, therefore, have fewer accidents, more productive employees and lower workers’ compensation costs.
Policies alone won’t get results; a successful program must move from paper to practice. Putting a policy into practice requires a strategic plan clearly communicated to key participants, good execution of that plan based on developed competencies and a culture that inspires and rewards people to do their best.
When developing any business initiative, there must be an emphasis on frontline supervisors and helping them succeed. Every experienced businessperson knows that any new program—safety, quality or anything else—lives and dies with the frontline supervisor. If the frontline supervisor knows the program and wants to make it happen, the program succeeds; if not, it is a source of constant struggle and an endless drain on resources and energies. Providing supervisors with knowledge and skills through training is critical to the success of any program.
A solid safety and health program integrated into the daily operation and led by competent supervisors is just the beginning. Successful safety and health programs focus on being proactive instead of always reacting to issues. Incident investigations provide an excellent source of information on real or potential issues present in the workplace.
Workers’ compensation is designed to recompense employees for injuries or illnesses they suffer in the course of their employment. This should not come as a surprise, but increasing numbers of claims drive up workers’ compensation costs. To reduce those costs, you must reduce your accidents, and the ability to reduce accidents is significantly enhanced when those accidents are thoroughly investigated instead of simply being reported.
Incident reports are historical records that only cite facts, while incident investigations go deeper to find the root cause and make improvements. Businesses that stop rising workers’ compensation costs have an effective incident investigation process that discovers the root cause of the problem. Unless the root cause is discovered, recommendations for improvement will remain fruitless. Again, training proves beneficial because a supervisor skilled in incident analysis is a better problem solver for all production-related issues, not just safety.
All incidents should be investigated to find out what went wrong and why. Some may suggest that investigating every accident is a bit over the top, and only those that incur significant costs are worthy of scrutiny. But ask yourself this question: If you only investigated serious quality concerns instead of every little deviation, would your quality program still be effective? Companies with solid quality programs investigate and resolve every deviation from quality standards.
If your emphasis is only on those incidents that must be recorded on the OSHA 300 log, you close your eyes to the biggest incident category: first aid-only incidents. Many companies get upset about recordables or lost-time accidents because of the significant costs involved, but they don’t realize that the small costs and high numbers of first aid-only incidents add up.
The final steps focus on training and auditing your program for continuous improvement. Training plays a significant role in increasing safety and reducing workers’ compensation costs. The goal of training is to develop competent people who have the knowledge, skill and understanding to perform assigned job responsibilities. More than anything else, competence will improve all aspects of your business and drive down costs. Supervisors must have the knowledge and ability to integrate every safety and health program into their specific areas of responsibility. Every employee must know what is expected of them when it comes to implementing safe work procedures.
Once the programs are developed and implemented, they must be reviewed regularly to ensure they are still relevant and effective. This might require a significant change in how you manage your safety program. However, it may be time to make this leap if your workers' compensation rates are high.
Having a sound safety program yields many benefits, including the following:
At Hylant Toyotsu, we are committed to helping you establish a strong safety program that minimizes your workers’ compensation exposures. Contact us today to learn more about our OSHA compliance, safety program, and accident investigation tools and resources.
The above information does not constitute advice. Always contact your insurance broker or trusted advisor for insurance-related questions.