Creating a great Safety Program for an organization does not happen accidentally.
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John Brattlof entered the construction Safety world in 1993 in the Houston industrial m Creating a great Safety Program for an organization does not happen accidentally.
He is currently serving as the Central Texas Chapter of Associated Builders and Contractors Safety Committee Co-Chairman and the Co-Chairman of the ASSP Construction Practice Specialty Practice with co-author John Brattlof.
He has implemented a monthly job site inspection competition, an emerging leaders program, an extensive Safety training incentive program, and a company Safety Rodeo.
In June of 2021, Todd became the Vice President of Safety and HR for BCS Concrete Structures.
Todd has also been on the faculty of the Austin Community College\'s Building Construction Technology Department, where he has been teaching courses in Construction Safety since 2016.
Todd spent 15 years as the Safety Director for a commercial painting contractor with 100 employees.
Smith entered construction Safety in 2005 after serving in the 82nd Airborne Division\'s, 313th Military Intelligence Battalion\'s Training Manager and then a Spanish Language Instructor at the University of Texas-San Antonio and the University of Texas-Austin, where he received the Teaching Excellence Award.
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Creating Symbiotic Safety describes everything necessary for addressing all the elements of Safety on the jobsite.
The goal is to equip construction companies with the ability to maintain a safe work environment that contributes positively to the financial needs of the project.
Smith\'s and John Brattlof\'s second book on construction safety.
This proven method will help you achieve a Thriving Safety culture within one year! This is Todd C.
By understanding the motivations of executives, management, and employees, a system can be modified to align the goals and motives of each level toward having Safety become the natural outcome.
Therefore, if you want to change the results - change the process.
Creating Symbiotic Safety will help the Safety professional understand that Safety issues are the outcome of the process.
The problem seems to be covered and dealt with, but there has been nothing done to correct the cause of the problem.
This approach is akin to putting band-aids on an infection.
Unfortunately, many Safety professionals have attempted to correct a poor Safety Program by attacking the undesired outcomes.
Creating a great Safety Program for an organization does not happen accidentally