SITUATIONAL
AWARENESS
Safety is about concentrating on the job at hand. A momentary
lapse is all that it takes for a disaster to happen. It
is essential that you stay focused on what you are doing
now and the effect that action has on the overall job. (If
this then? what)
A routine is one way of maintaining that focus; an edge
in the successful job done well. When you are out of sync
you loose one tool; and sometimes your focus is lost as
well. Every one of us knows that you can not stow the outriggers
with the boom still up. That is not the issue. Yes, that
is the reason the pump fell over. That is not the lesson
to take away from this event, you know that.
Just think about all the pictures you have seen of pumps
'tire side up'. A large majority of them have the outriggers
stowed. All of the operators of these machines knew that
they would fall over with no outriggers. What they did not
know (at that time) was that they had ceased to be aware
of where they were at that time. That is the issue here
as I see it; just a momentary loss of focus, a lapse in
your situational awareness.
The better you are at your job the less likely you are to
loose your situational awareness, your focus. We have all
seen operators that NEVER really "get it" they
never have a handle on 'where' in the routine they are.
Their brain never does make the connection ... If this--
then (reaction).
I used to work for a guy, (Tom). His observation was that
"The guy moves like a professional". = he knows
where he is.
Watch a really good, focused operator move around his machine.
It is like a dance where he knows the steps. He is focused;
his situational awareness is set on high at all times. If
the music stops or changes he still knows where he is and
what is next.
I write often about the routine. The routine is not and
end to its self; it is a tool. Like any tool it makes your
job easier to do well. The tool is not the answer, it is
a way to simplify or make finding the answer easier and
more assured. It is an edge or aid in the battle for a job
well done.
It is your job to maintain situational awareness at all
times. There are many activities vying for your attention;
cell phones, friends, strange noises that don’t fit
into the situation, truck horns, two signal men, calcium
chloride in the middle of summer… the list is endless.
Sometimes it is just too much to deal with and you get short
with people or over react to a situation. The dispatcher
wants you on another job, your wife would like you to be
home early, the mud has been slow all day, the drivers want
to yack with each other, the back end of your pump has two
yards on it, the contractor wants you to move to the other
side of the job to do one column; being the ring master
in the circus and staying focused on your primary job is
tough.
A rookie needs to watch the box and the boom and that is
ok because that is who he is. He knows that he doesn’t
have the “tools” to operate on auto pilot. The
other end of the spectrum is the guy that can back in the
mixer truck, move the boom, think about the next set up,
tell the driver discharging that he is getting ready to
turn off the pump, tell the dispatcher when he will be done,
glance at his outriggers and NEVER forget where he is or
not know the foreseeable reaction of his actions. 99.5%
of all operators are somewhere in between these two extremes.
How do you get from rookie to auto pilot?
Practice
Remember what works
Develop learning tools
Learn the art of being able to focus
Create your system
Practice
Remember where you are
Study the reactions to your actions
Practice
Mentally develop a list of what doesn’t work
Refine your system
Practice
Think before you act
Practice
Know where you are
Practice
Become situationally aware
Practice
Practice makes perfect
;~)
Written By Bob Sanderson
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