Title: Safety Culture A Case for Change
1Safety Culture A Case for Change
- George K. Mortensen
- Senior Program Manager Industry External
Relations - Institute of Nuclear Power Operations (INPO)
2Quotes
- If you want to make enemies, try to change
something. - Woodrow Wilson
- If we don't change direction soon, we'll end up
where we're going. - Professor Irwin Corey
- The future has a way of arriving unannounced.
- George Will
3Culture - Where are you headed?
4Topics
- Safety culture according to INPO
- Learning from the past
- INPOs continuing focus on safety culture
- Safety culture lessons learned
- Looking ahead to the future
5Safety Culture - According to INPO
- Safety Culture
- An organizations values, behaviors modeled by
its leaders and internalized by its members
that serve to make nuclear safety an overriding
priority. - Typical industry definition Its what your
people do (or dont do) on night shift when you
are not around. - Culture is for the group what character and
personality are for the individual - It starts at the top
6IAEA Definition of Safety Culture
- That assembly of characteristics and attitudes
in organizations and individuals which
establishes that, as an overriding priority,
(nuclear) plant safety issues receive the
attention warranted by their significance. -
- Source International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA). 1991. Safety Culture, Safety Series, No.
75-INSAG-4. Vienna International Atomic Energy
Agency.
7European Understanding the 7 S of Safety
Culture ....
8Principles for a Strong Safety Culture - INPO
- The 8 Principles
- Everyone is personally responsible for nuclear
safety. - Leaders demonstrate commitment to nuclear safety.
- Trust permeates the organization.
- Decision-making reflects safety first.
- Nuclear technology is recognized as special and
unique. - A questioning attitude is cultivated.
- Organizational learning is embraced.
- Nuclear safety undergoes constant examination.
9Various Approaches Same Focus
10Learning From the Past -- Events With Significant
Safety Culture Impact
- RMS Titanic (1912)
- TMI Case Study (1979)
- Bhopal Event (1982)
- Salem Marsh Grass Event (1984)
- Challenger Case Study (1986)
- Chernobyl Case Study (1986)
- USS Greeneville Case Study (2001)
- Davis-Besse Case Study (2002)
- Columbia Case Study (2003)
- Various Ethics Case Studies
11Three Mile Island The initiating event for INPO
Systematic gathering analysis of operating
experience
Operator continuing training plant simulators
Agency-accredited training institutions
Set and police its own standards of
excellence Strive for dramatic change in attitude
toward safety (safety culture)
12THEMES from Extended Plant Shutdowns...
- Overconfidence
- Isolationism
- Managing Relationships
- Operations and Engineering
- Production Priorities
- Managing Change
- Plant Events
- Nuclear Leaders
- Self-Critical
13Top 10 Reasons Nuclear WorkersDon't Comply with
Safety Culture Expectations
- 10. Ignorance -- I did not know this was a
hazard." - 9. Lack of skill -- "I did not know what to do
about it." - 8. Mistrust of authority -- "They lied to us
before about safety, so how do I know they're
telling the truth now?" - 7. Personal experiences -- Risk taking Nothing
bad ever happened to me before by doing it this
way, so why worry now?" - 6. Lack of incentives -- "What's in it for me?
Why should I follow this much harder procedure?" - 5. Mixed incentives -- "My boss tells me to
report unsafe conditions but still expects me to
get the job done on time and with less help. - 4. Unclear disciplinary processes -- "Nothing
bad will happen to me if I ignore the hazard or
do things my own way." - 3. Group norms -- "If I point out the hazard, my
buddies will think I'm ratting on them or if I
insist on following some procedure, they'll think
I'm a wimp risk taking." - 2. Macho self-image -- "I can do this job in
spite of the hazards, thrill of risk taking, I
can be a hero, and others will respect me for
it." - 1. Personality factors -- "I know better - who
needs to work that hard? Who cares - it's not my
problem."
14RISK Taking- A Significant Influence on Safety
Culture
- Chemicals in the brain determine whether a person
is a risk-taker or risk avoider or somewhere
in-between - Risk Decisions May have their roots in the
Fight or Flight nature of man - The Human is the only animal that knowingly takes
Risks for pleasure - The adrenaline surge after a successful risk is a
large PIC Positive, Immediate, Certain effect - Reinforced risk taking can cause non conservative
decision making
15Risks Can Be Evaluated Ahead of Time
- Northeast Blackout (August 14, 2003)
- No major equipment failures, thus no major
surprises
16INPOs Continuing Focus on Safety Culture
Evaluations
Events Analysis and Information Exchange
17Safety Culture Can Be Observed
- We like to observe attitudes, behaviors
conditions
- We also prepare our evaluators with performance
information
18Safety Culture and Plant Evaluations
- Safety Culture Principals are included in our
Performance Objectives Criteria (POC) --
(OR.1) - No Stand-alone Safety Culture POC
- Techniques developed to help teams evaluate
safety culture - Safety Culture Touch Points Established to Push
Discussions - Many more high activity period observations being
made Refueling Outages, Reactor Startups, or
Shutdowns - Analysis Review includes Safety Culture look
19Tools for Evaluating Safety Culture
- Safety culture bubble chart
- Safety culture relative ranking
- Safety culture summary observation
- Corrective action database
- Root cause reports
- Event reports
- Oversight reports
- Significant Operating Experience Report (SOER)
02-4, Revision 1 Davis-Besse Event
20Safety Culture Touch Points during Plant
Evaluations
- Pre-visit at site
- Discuss evaluation methodology with SVP
- 2nd Week Phone Call at INPO
- Discuss observation facts and conclusion
- 2nd Week Analysis Meeting at site
- Analyze SC using Evaluation tools
- OR assessment meeting at INPO
- Discuss SC findings and results
- Pre-Exit Meeting
- Discuss SC findings and results
- CEO Exit
- Discuss health of safety culture
21Safety Culture Bubble Chart
SAMPLE TEXT Weak self-assessments, root cause
determinations, trending processes.
SAMPLE TEXT Leaders demonstrate commitment and
are open to input, but they are not sufficiently
involved.
Leaders demonstrate commitment to safety.
Organizational learning is embraced.
Nuclear safety is everyones responsibility.
SAFETY CULTURE
A what if approach is cultivated.
Decision-making reflects safety first.
Nuclear safety undergoes constant examination.
Nuclear is recognized as different.
Trust permeates the organization.
22Safety Culture Relative Ranking
23Evaluation Results
- 34 plant evaluations and domestic peer reviews
were conducted in 2005 - Nine AFIs were written that refer to shortfalls
with the safety culture principles. These AFIs
cited deficiencies with 15 principles. - Recent OR.1 AFI Example
- A systematic, rigorous approach has not been used
for important decisions, this has resulted in
automatic shutdowns and isolations, distractions
to the workforce and increased dose, and
challenged automatic safety features. Also,
oversight of these decisions by the station
leadership team is lacking.
24INPO Programs
INPO Programs
Evaluations
Evaluations
Events Analysis and Information Exchange
Events Analysis and Information Exchange
25Events Analysis and Safety Culture
- Screeners add SC (Safety Culture) code to
potential events - Follow-up with station for additional detail on
these events - Trend reports
- Earlier identification of declining performance
- Performance Indicators
- NRC Reactor Oversight Process
- Analysis Review Board
26INPO Significant Operating Experience Report
(SOER) 02-04
- Recommendations
- Cover the Davis-Besse case study, or a similar
case study, with all managers and supervisors.
Continue on a periodic basis and for new managers
and supervisors. - Conduct a self-assessment to determine to what
degree your organization has a healthy respect
for nuclear safety and that nuclear safety is not
compromised by production priorities. The
self-assessment should emphasize the leadership
skills and approaches necessary to achieve and
maintain the proper focus on nuclear safety. - Identify and document abnormal plant conditions
or indications at your station that cannot be
readily explained. Pay particular attention to
long-term unexplained conditions. - Recommendations can be evaluated every plant
evaluation.
27INPO Programs
Evaluations
Events Analysis and Information Exchange
28Training and Safety Culture
- Train the way you work
- Safety culture elements embedded in training
- HPI training reinforces safety culture
- Management owns training
- Periodic comprehensive training accreditation
board review (Safety culture is in evidence) - Emphasis during our seminars and courses
29INPO Programs
Evaluations
Events Analysis and Information Exchange
30Assistance Activities
- Assistance visits look at safety culture
- Comments provided at assistance debrief
- Senior representatives assigned for assistance
interactions - Four key activities
- Operator turnover
- Oncoming shift crew briefing
- Plan of the day meeting (Leadership meeting)
- Condition report screening
31INPO Lessons Learned
- Significant events typically drive major safety
culture changes - Safety culture principles are effective
- Strong safety culture yields strong performance
- Senior management must buy into and reinforce
safety culture principles (i.e., it starts at the
top) - Tendency to become complacent is difficult to
overcome
32Looking Ahead to the Future
- Principles for a Strong Nuclear Safety Culture
are not expected to change - Gain experience with new evaluation Performance
Objectives Criteria - OR.1 FOUNDATION FOR NUCLEAR SAFETY
- OR.2 LEADERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT
- OR.3 HUMAN PERFORMANCE
- OR.4 MANAGEMENT AND LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT
- OR.5 INDEPENDENT MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
- Continue to embed Safety Culture elements deeply
into the 4 INPO Cornerstone programs - Work with the NRC on the integration of Safety
Culture into the Reactor Oversight Process - Further Integration of Safety Culture and Human
Performance?
33Davis-Besse Lessons Learned
34How close were we to the corner?
Source James Reason. Managing the Risks of
Organizational Accidents, 1997 (in press).