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BEHAVIORAL JOB SAFETY ANALYSIS TRAINING

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Title: BEHAVIORAL JOB SAFETY ANALYSIS TRAINING


1
BEHAVIORAL JOB SAFETY ANALYSIS TRAINING
  • Elkhorn Construction Inc.

2
What is a Behavioral Job Safety Analysis-BJSA
  • A BJSA is a tool in which we plan our work,
    identify hazards, mitigate the hazards, and
    assign the responsible people.
  • It is basically the plan we will use to complete
    our work.

3
Elkhorn BJSA Front Page
4
Elkhorn BJSA-Back Page
5
What is the purpose of the BJSA?
  • The purpose of the BJSA is to document how we
    will complete our work in a manner that
    identifies and protects us from any hazards we
    may face.

6
Who should complete a BJSA?
  • The BJSA should be completed by a person that is
    familiar with the task to be done and hazards we
    may face.
  • It is usually done by a foreman or team lead.
  • The entire crew should discuss the BJSA and
    complete it as team.
  • A foreman may not notice something that a laborer
    sees as potentially hazardous.

7
When should we complete a BJSA?
  • A BJSA should be completed before we start any
    task.
  • If the task poses any hazards a BJSA is required.
    Normal office work would be an example of low
    risk task that would not need a BJSA
  • If we finish with a task and start a new task not
    covered on the original BJSA then we need a new
    one.
  • If conditions or hazards change then we need to
    updated and review the BJSA

8
Completing the BJSA
  • Job Number, Elkhorn Office(Western Slope),Date
  • Task Description-What are we going to do?
  • What is the worst thing that may happen?
  • Other permits associated with this BJSA
  • Inspections required?
  • Who are the TRAINED operators and spotters?

9
Completing the BJSA-Hazard ID tool
  • The Hazard ID tool helps us to recognize hazards
    present during our work
  • Circle the PPE required for this job task-Does
    everyone know how to use the PPE
  • Circle all hazards present. We will mitigate or
    reduce them later in the BJSA
  • Sketch our work area in the box
  • Identify the location where we will muster and
    show it on the sketch

10
Completing the BJSA-the Job Safety Analysis
  • Observable steps for the task
  • Tools and Equipment used to complete the task
  • Hazards we face while completing the task
  • Steps to control or mitigate the hazards
  • Who is responsible for the hazard control?

11
Completing the BJSA-Job Steps
  • The job steps must be observable steps that we
    will do to complete the task. For example, Task
    Bolt 12 inch valve to metering skid. Dont make
    the steps too general, add enough detail so the
    steps are clear enough that those working on the
    task and others observing can understand what is
    to be done but they should not be a Standard
    Operating Procedure but a reminder of each
    general step of the task.
  • A task should have 4-12 job steps. Too few steps
    will be too vague and more than 12 steps probably
    indicates a separate task that requires a
    separate BJSA. If additional room is needed, use
    a blank BJSA.
  • Each step should note what is to be done, not how
    it is done.
  • Keep the job steps in the correct order.

12
Completing the BJSA-Tools and Equipment
  • Any tools or equipment needed for the job step
    should be listed. Having them available make our
    job safer and more efficient.
  • Having them listed reminds us of hazards they may
    create.

13
Completing the BJSA-Hazards
  • We need to identify any potential hazards we face
    at each job step. These can be large hazards like
    a crane dropping a load or a small hazard of bees
    being around.
  • We should list any hazards identified on the
    Hazard ID tool (front page)
  • The entire crew should list hazards. A group is
    more likely to think of all the hazards than a
    single person.
  • An example may be sparks from grinding that can
    enter eyes or cause a fire

14
Completing the BJSA-Hazard Control
  • Once we have identified the hazards, we need to
    write how we will eliminate or control the
    hazard.
  • It is better to completely get rid of the hazard
    if possible. For example weld pipe on the ground
    instead of a heights to eliminate a fall hazard.
  • If we cant do that, we should try to control the
    hazard. If we cant weld the pipe on the ground
    we may build a scaffold platform to reduce the
    fall hazard.
  • The last form of protection should PPE. If we
    cant weld the pipe from scaffold then we would
    need to utilize a harness lanyard attached to
    an anchor point

15
Completing the BJSA-Hazard Control
  • Be specific in how we will control the hazard.
    Avoid phrases like use PPE. It should be
    something like wear ear plugs and ear muffs
    while working in the compressor building.
  • Keep the BJSA organized in a way that it is easy
    to see what we should be doing to protect
    ourselves. That can be listing the hazard on one
    line and listing the mitigation on the same line
    to the right. You may also number a hazard as 1
    and label the mitigation with the same 1.

16
Completing the BJSA-Hazard Control Responsibility
  • Once we have identified the hazard, talked about
    how we will deal with the hazard, then we will
    assign someone to be responsible for the hazard
    control.
  • This may be one person that will wear hearing
    protection while grinding or the entire crew
    working next to a compressor.
  • If a person is assigned, they need to make sure
    that they have taken care of the hazard before
    work starts.

17
Signatures, Auditing, and SSEs
  • Print who completed the BJSA, the foreman that
    reviewed it prior to the start of work, and who
    audits the form.
  • The crew should sign it once they review the
    BJSA. By signing it they agree that they
    understand it, agree to follow what it says, and
    they understand they must stop the work if we are
    not following our plan.
  • They should also circle Y/N if they are a short
    service employee to let others know that they may
    need additional guidance.

18
Utilizing the BJSA
  • The BJSA is a tool that will only protect us if
    we follow what it says. It takes everyone
    following the plan for it be effective.
  • The BJSA must be in place BEFORE we start the
    work. You are not permitted to go to work until
    it is completed correctly.
  • If conditions or our job steps change, we need to
    address those changes on the BJSA.
  • Remember if we finish one task before days end,
    we need to develop another BJSA to start a new
    task.

19
BJSA Meet Greet
  • If others are entering our work area, we need to
    greet them, ask them to review sign our BJSA.
  • This could be other Elkhorn work groups, client
    personnel, or other contractors.
  • If you enter another groups work area ask to
    review their BJSA. You will be exposed to the
    same hazards they face, so you need to know how
    to protect yourself.

20
BJSA Group Practice
  • As a group, complete a BJSA for changing a flat
    tire on a pickup truck.
  • Review the previous slides if needed to assist in
    the process.

21
BEHAVIORAL JOB SAFETY ANALYSIS TRAININGElkhorn
Construction Inc.
  • Created by Justin Booth, OHST, CHST
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