CEO Material Safety Leadership
- By Robert Pater
- Apr 01, 2008
How can you triumph over difficult challenges,
even when your company has
dual dangers of intensively physical work
and an aging workforce?
Best leaders don’t give in to excuses,
rationalizations, nor blaming workers.
Smart Executives can learn from Steve
Rowley, CEO of Eagle Materials
(www.eaglematerials.com), who leads
Safety with passion and precision.
Steve has successfully constructed a
strong Safety culture and excellent performance
in what seems like an uphill battle,
with 1,700 employees (many long-term, in
13 states) making building materials—
gypsum wallboard, cement, recycled
paperboard, and concrete. They operate
heavy machinery in punishing heavy industrial
environments, with significant manual
materials handling involved.
The results? Best-in-industry Safety
performance. Steve is pleased that “Safety
has become infectious within the organization.”
And everyone, from senior managers
to supervisors, to hourly line employees,
understands the importance of Safety in
everyday actions at EM. How has Steve’s
Eagle Materials (EM) accomplished this?
¦ Build upon a foundation of trust. He
tells everyone in EM, “Before we get to
the point of truly developing safer work
habits, you have to have a culture of
trust. Hourly employees must have
complete confidence in management’s
sincerity that every employee’s Safety is
paramount and takes precedence above
all actions.” Steve models straight talk,
consistent actions, open communication
between all parties about finding “a safe
way to work”—and then executing.
No mixed messages are tolerated here.
“We’re never in a rush if it endangers any
employee at EM.” Implications for Safety
Professionals? “I want to be able to look
each Safety manager in the face and know
that everyone knows how to perform his
job as safely and effectively as possible,”
Steve says.
¦ Make Safety personal, not just statistical.
Eagle Materials managers and
supervisors are expected to focus on
awareness and actions, rather than just
trailing indicators. After initially
ensuring EM’s workplaces and equipment
are as safe as possible, main
emphasis now is on eliminating unsafe
acts. How? Through a wide array of
awareness and training campaigns and
visual, physical, verbal, and incentive
reminders done on a daily basis. He says,
“We need to make sure all employees
know the real risks and how to overcome
them.”
¦ Develop and adhere to a strong
system. Steve, an engineer by background,
emphasizes rooting out poor
performance actions and recognizing
exceptional ones. He cites cross-training
with other EM plants as an effective tool
to improve both sites’ Safety.
¦ Expect top performance of
everyone—and put a huge emphasis on
Safety. When he took over as CEO four
years ago, he asked himself, “We lead
the nation in profitability, but not in
Safety. Why can’t we be equally good
regarding the Safety of our workforce?”
Steve believes “Safety is a total company
responsibility” and starts with the top.
I’ve seen Steve give Safety “assignments” to
senior managers for report-back within
specified timeframes—and they all know
this is not busywork, but will be read,
assessed, and acted upon.
And Steve talks about “building ‘best in
business’ Safety programs” by integrating
Safety into every EM action and process.
At EM’s annual Safety Conference, in
which he took an active and attentive lead,
Steve reinforced: “Everyone in our plants
and Company is responsible when anyone
has an injury.” And that Safety “is not
something you download to employees.”
I asked Steve what happens if a manager
doesn’t strongly buy into Safety either by
word or actions. His response: “Not
accepting our Safety culture is not an
option. This directly affects whether you
will continue to be employed at EM.”
¦ Unearth and rebuild weaker areas.
Steve makes sure EM recognizes sites
that have achieved great successes (one
of which has a notable employee
involvement system) while also focusing
on areas “where we haven’t achieved.”
Front-line supervisors are required to
submit upgraded job Safety analyses
monthly (“I want to make sure there are
no ‘tick the boxes’”), as well as leading
daily discussions that squarely place
Safety “front and center.”
Steve realizes that, like many other
companies, EM hasn’t done an exceptional
job of training front-line supervisors in
Safety. So EM’s 2008 objectives include
transferring to each supervisor specific
Safety expertise and training skills “at least
as strong or stronger” than EM’s Safety
Professionals. “Our hourly workforce will
routinely receive the best Safety direction
and training possible.”
EM also plans to have best-performing
sites spearhead systems that further boost
performance (with outside help), then serve
as an internal benchmark for other sites.
Through passion, commitment, high
expectations, and consistent actions, you
can rise to the top of Safety performance
and culture—even in highly challenging
environments.
This article originally appeared in the April 2008 issue of Occupational Health & Safety.