AC SAFETY CULTURE “ROUTE SAFETY”

40
AC SAFETY CULTURE “ROUTE SAFETY”

description

AC SAFETY CULTURE “ROUTE SAFETY”. DONOVAN’S DEMISE PHOTO’S ALLEY GREG’S GRAVITY RICH’S HANG FIETON’S FALLOUT. ACCIDENT — an undesired event or sequence of events causing injury, ill-health or property damage. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of AC SAFETY CULTURE “ROUTE SAFETY”

Page 1: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

AC SAFETY CULTURE “ROUTE SAFETY”

Page 2: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

DONOVAN’S DEMISE

PHOTO’S ALLEY

GREG’S GRAVITY

RICH’S HANG

FIETON’S FALLOUT

Page 3: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

ACCIDENT — an undesired event or sequence of events causing injury, ill-health or property damage.

NEAR MISS — near misses describe incidents where, given a slight shift in time or distance, injury, ill-health or damage easily could have occurred.

Page 4: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

“SAFETY CULTURE”

THE WAY SAFETY AND SAFETY TRAINING ARE MANAGED.

“THE WAY IT IS DONE AROUND HERE”

Page 5: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

“TO SOME DEGREE HUMAN ERROR IS INEVITABLE IN AVALANCHE WORK ORANY OTHER COMPLEX SITUATIONS.”

KEEP IN MIND:

Page 6: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

KNOWLEDGE NEEDED FOR ROUTE SAFETY

*SNOW & AVALANCHE KNOWLEDGE

*ROUTE KNOWLEDGE

*SKI CUT KNOWLEDGE

*EXPLOSIVE KNOWLEDGE

*RESCUE KNOWLEDGE

Page 7: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

REPEATED MISTAKES BY AVALANCHE PROFESSIONALS

*TERRAIN EVALUATION

*SNOWPACK EVALUATION*CONTOL PRACTICES*PARTNER DYNAMICS

*ORGANIZATION

5 INTER-RELATED CATAGORIES

(Doug Richmond)

Page 8: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

TERRAIN EVALUATION

*MISJUDGMENT OF AVALANCHE POTENTIAL

*SKI CUT SUITABILITY

*INHERENTLY PROBLEMATIC TERRAIN

Page 9: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

SNOW PACK EVALUATION

*DEEP LEVEL INSTABILITIES

*SKI CUT SUITABILITY

*EXTREME EVENTS

*POST CONTROL CHANGES

*ISOTHERMAL EVALUATIONS

Page 10: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

CONTROL PRACTICES

*BOMBING TECHNIQUES

*OVERDEPENDENCE ON SKI CUTTING

*HARD SLAB CONTROL

Page 11: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

SKI CUTTING MISTAKES*WRONG TERRAIN

*WRONG SNOW

*WRONG TECHNIQUE

*PERCEIVED NECESSITY

Page 12: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

PARTNER DYNAMICS

*ABANDON “SAFE RITUAL TRAVEL”

*COMMUNICATION

*COORDINATION WITH TEAMS

*VISITORS

*LARGE NUMBERS

Page 13: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

ORGANIZATIONAL MISTAKES

*OVERALL TIME FOR AVALANCHE

*BOMB BUDGET

*UNSAFE CONTROL ROUTES

*HIGH TURNOVER

*OVER-STRUCTURED AC PLAN

*PERFORM UNDER SIEGE

Page 14: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

PROFESSIONAL AVALANCHE NEAR MISSES

*DISTRACTIONS

*COMMUNICATION FAILURE

*MOTIVATED REASONING

*REPEAT INCIDENTS

4 CONTRIBUTING FACTORS

(RON SIMENHOIS & SCOTTY SAVAGE)

Page 15: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

DECISION MAKING

*LESS EXPERIENCE – HEURISTICS, RULES OF THUMB

*EXPERIENCED – “RPD” RECOGNITIONPRIMAL DECISIONS, GUT FEELING

*TWEENERS – LITTLE OF BOTH, BUT TEND TO THINK THEY KNOW MORE THAN THEY DO

Page 16: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

*NEED HEALTHY DISCUSSIONS, WHERE THERE IS NO FEAR OF REPRISAL

*MISTAKES ARE BUILDING BLOCKS FOR GOOD DECISION MAKING

*SEE IT, SAY IT, FIX IT

Page 17: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 18: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 19: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 20: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 21: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 22: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 23: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 24: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 25: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 26: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 27: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 28: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 29: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 30: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 31: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 32: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 33: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 34: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

SAFETY

Page 35: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 36: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”
Page 37: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

BE SAFE OUT THERE

Page 38: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

*PROPER GEAR AND SKILL TO USE IT

*KNOW CURRENT WEATHER & SNOWPACK DATA

*VISUAL AND VERBAL CONTACT WITH PARTNER

*KNOWLEDGE & COMMUNICATION WITH OTHER TEAMS

*SAFE EXPLOSIVE HANDELING

*SAFE ZONES

*HAVE PACK CLOSED AND READY

*NEVER BECOME COMPLACENT

BASED ON JOSH’S LIST

Page 39: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

**NO LIGHT POLICY**

*PULL FUSE TRAIN AND PUT IN MEMORABLE PLACE WITH CAP DOWN AND MOVE AWAY, NOT TO BE APPROACHED WITH IN THE NEXT FIFTEEN MINUTES.

**DUD POLICY**

*MAKE NOTE OF WHERE DUD IS LOCATED*CONTROL SLOPE AS NEEDED*BEFORE RETRIEVAL, WAIT AT LEAST 15 MINUTES OR IF EMMITTING SMOKE, FOR AT LEAST ONE HOUR.*DISARM BY PULLING THE FUSE TRAIN (RETURN FUSE TRAIN TO FORECASTER FOR INSPECTION)*DOCUMENT IF DUD CAN’T BE FOUND

Page 40: AC SAFETY CULTURE     “ROUTE SAFETY”

ALWAYS!!!*COMMUNICATE, DON’T ASSUME*KNOW POTENTIAL HAZARD*HAVE PROPER EQUIPMENT *TEST TRANSCEIVER BEFORE LEAVING BASE AREA*HAVE VISUAL & VERBAL COMMUNICATION*WORK FROM SAFE ZONE*SPOT EACH OTHER W/ MOVEMENT & EXPLOSIVES*CHECK TO SEE IF SLIDE PATH CLEAR*ASSESS WHERE PATH IS LOADED & PLACEMENT NEEDED*CLIP 1” OFF OF FUSE*MAKE SURE IG IS PROPERLY SEATED*INFORM PARTNER “IG ON”*AGAIN, CHECK FOR CLEAR SLIDE PATH*MAKE SURE FUSE IS LIT*REDUCE EXPOSURE TO BLAST & FUMES*MOVE SAFELY & SPOT EACH OTHER WHILE SKI CUTTING*ASSESS & RE-EVALUATE HAZARD CONDITIONS*COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER ROUTES, IF NEEDED*BE AWARE OF TIME*GET MORE EXPLOSIVES, IF NEEDED*INFORM WHEN DONE OR DELAYED