June - July 2021
Why a pragmatic approach to health and safety just makes sense You can have the best health and safety policies, but unless staff actually use them, they won’t do much good with a broad range of risks to the safety, health and wellbeing of its staff, from installing signs at great heights to working with hazardous chemicals. Staff also sometimes work under tight deadlines or in stressful situations – like when the company stayed open during last year’s Lockdown 4 to create Covid-19 signage for other essential businesses such as supermarkets. Since SL Safety Consulting came on board, Wilson says Sign Foundry has been able to make some big improvements in health and
safety really quickly. “We now do regular toolbox talks where people can speak up if they’ve seen something unsafe. "We have an incident reporting system that means we can catch issues early and deal with them before they cause bigger problems. “We also do a lot more inspections on our gear, particularly our height and harness equipment.” Another benefit is that Sign Foundry has been able to achieve the highest level of accreditation in the SiteWise scheme – a
prequalification system that grades companies’ health and safety capabilities and is used by many large businesses when they are selecting suppliers. “Previously, we had only managed to get SiteWise Orange accreditation. Moving up to Green accreditation has given us a real competitive advantage when pitching for work,” Wilson says. “But the biggest advantage is knowing staff are safer. I can rest easy at night knowing that everyone will get home safe and sound every day.”
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his was the problem facing Steve Wilson, General Manager of Lower Hutt commercial signage company, Sign Foundry. “Our health and safety policies and procedures were all written out, but they used to sit in a cupboard and weren’t being used or followed properly,” he says. “For example, staff weren’t using their personal protective equipment when they went into the manufacturing room, like they were supposed to. That was a big issue for me because their wellbeing is important.” The company sought advice from health and consultant Steve Logan, of SL Safety Consulting, who came up with ideas for making health and safety ‘simple and pragmatic’ by building it into the way people worked. “Steve focused on practical things we can do – like keeping everyone’s PPE in drawers right beside the manufacturing room door, so it’s convenient to put on just before you go in.” Sign Foundry has to deal