Addressing the cultural complexity of OHS in the Australian mining industry
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00authored byC Aickin, A Shaw, Verna Blewett, L Stiller, S Cox
This paper summarises the findings of the site assessments of ten pilot mine sites involved in a project entitled, Creating a world-leading OHS culture in the NSW Mining Industry which was undertaken for the New South Wales Mine Safety Advisory Council (NSW MSAC). NSW MSAC was established in 1998 in NSW Australia and aims to increase the emphasis on safety and health within the mining industry by reviewing and analyzing safety performance, setting strategic directions, providing advice and developing policy recommendations. The project itself aimed to deliver a self-sustaining method for achieving and monitoring continuous improvement in OHS culture and practice to the NSW mining industry. The pilot sites involved in the project tested a set of self-assessment tools to enable mines to assess and improve their own OHS culture and performance on key elements of an OHS management system. The tools allowed examination of the current OHS culture of the sites. Sites then used a participative planning process to develop an improvement plan. This paper provides summary data only, without identifying the individual sites that were the source of the data.
Beyond Words Pty Ltd, Queensland, Australia; Shaw Idea Pty Ltd, Australia; Stephen Cox Consulting Pty Ltd, Queensland, Australia; University of South Australia; Workability Pty Ltd, NSW, Australia;
Era Eligible
Yes
Journal
Work : a journal of prevention, assessment and rehabilitation.