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Question

Daily JSA Improvements - Construction

  • November 1, 2024
  • 2 replies
  • 82 views

SafetyMatt

Hey all! I’m looking to make our daily job safety analysis (JSA, JHA, AHA, PTP, etc, etc) and I want to see if anyone out there has a template they feel works well. We are a commercial roofing company, so we will have our unique tasks and hazards, but if you have a format or way of doing it that is great, I’d love to connect and see what you’re using/doing. Thanks!

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2 replies

cara.beraldo
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Hey @SafetyMatt 

 

In the past my JSEA were paper based (yuk) but the main points we would document I have put below.  

I don’t have a SC template for this, but what I find where I am currently now the more I prompt responses and set triggers etc it captures their attention. and I am getting the information I need. 

Planning for the Job:

  • List tools / equipment / material / plans / plant drawings - this would capture high risk machines we would use like mig welders, gantry cranes, VLC, forklifts, big grinders 
  • Licenses, Training & Competencies – - this would capture if personal required specific licenses like rigger and dogger, Welder certs, HR license
  • List task - specific PPE required - this was anything out of the mandatory PPE the crew were required to wear, more task specific 

The Process for the Job:

  • Sequence no. 
  • Job Steps Consider each stage of the work, including preparation and clean-up
  • Potential Hazards Identify the potential things or situations that may cause harm to workers, plant or environment. 
  • Control Measures Describe the controls that will eliminate, reduce or minimise risk of injury or damage
    plant/environment
  • Responsible Nominate those responsible for the task and/or controls
  • Have the risks been controlled? Yes or No

Risk Assessment 

 

 

Sign Off:

Manager 

HSEQ 

Workers 


PJ_R
  • Starter
  • 1 reply
  • November 13, 2024

Looks like a pretty good response from Cara. I found, don’t worry about starting with perfection. Start simple and get everyone engaged. Its easy to evolve your safety analysis over time.

as per cara ‘s notes - you can build questions that branch and get to more details as you get confidence to delve more deeply.


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