Title: Statewide Safety and Wellness Leadership Initiative
1Statewide Safety and Wellness Leadership
Initiative
- Risk Seminar
- Oregon Department of Administrative Services-Risk
Management - Salem Oregon
- October 23, 2006
2Historical Perspective Leonard
Sweet, Historian, Futurist
- If we do not learn from history, we shall be
compelled to relive it. - True.
- But if we do not change the future, we shall be
compelled to endure it. - And that could be worse.
3Safety as a State Business FunctionPre-1980
- State Safety Manager - Executive Department
- Accident Prevention Model
- Post-1972 OSHA compliance focused
- Position eliminated in 1978-82 recession
- SAIF states insurer by statute
- Loss control services to each agency
- Claim handling by local office
- Set payroll rate that was deducted monthly from
agency budgets
4Safety as a State Business Function 1980 to 1987
- Safety is managed by the Agency Head
- Agency option to designate safety position
- Some agency safety staff addressed claims
- WC budget set for biennium
- SAIF
- Appointed a State Agency Account Rep
- Claims and Loss Control handled locally
- SAIF designated payroll rates annually
5Safety as a State Business Function 1980 to 1987
- Safety perceived as responsibility of safety
staff or committees, SAIF or OR-OSHA - Safety positions and program funding often cut in
budget reduction exercises - OSHA compliance model did not align with causes
of claims - Once injured, employees were SAIFs
responsibility - SAIF business model did not align with agency
needs - SAIF costs regularly exceeded budget
6Costs Exceeded Budget
7and Costs Attract Attention
- Hard insurance market for work comp drove costs
nationally - Oregon had 6th most expensive system in nation
- On the radar screen of the newly elected Governor
and others - Legislature directed agencies to study the cause
of wc costs exceeding budget, so
8Statewide Safety Initiative
- Issue Work comp costs were rising rapidly.
- Charge Learn the cause and develop a plan to
bring costs in control. - Areas of Focus
- Perception and Opinion of Key Stakeholders
- Management Systems to address safety and work
comp - Data analysis
9Risk Management Surveyed Agencies Perceptions
- Oregon laws prevented management of claims and
allowed abuse - SAIF overcharged state agencies to balance losses
from small policy holders - Work comp claimants malinger because many
injuries had no accident cause - Managers could be sued if they called injured
workers at home
10Risk Management Surveyed Agencies Perceptions
- Injured workers had to be 100 before they
could return to work - Agency safety efforts made no impact on the
rates SAIF charged - Safety was not on the front burner for agency
head performance expectations - Agency executives did not know what good
performance looked like
11Risk Management Looked at Safety/WC Management
Systems
- Accident Prevention/OSHA Compliance model
- Safety staff averaged SR 19 many layers to
executive staff - Injured Worker management and claim oversight in
HR, few experts, always an additional duty, RTW
late and spotty, attention to claim reserves - Policies related to injured worker rights or
legal compliance not management duties or
expectations - Premium Charges were automated", not understood
and not responsive to agency action
12Risk Management Examined Claims Data
- 80 of claims and costs came from twelve agencies
- Nature and cause of most injuries had not
changed, except - Agencies, like the rest of Oregon, had rapid rise
in stress claim filing - Time loss occurrences were 25 of agencies
claims and caused 95 of costs
131980s State Experience Serious Claims per 100
FTE
141987 Statewide Safety InitiativeKey Elements
- Executive Order to reduce injuries and, thus,
reduce WC budget impact - Agency Heads continue to be responsible for
safety and managing WC costs - Partner with SAIF and DIF (now DCBS) to address
program, training, system and process needs - Focus resources on the Top 12 agencies to improve
performance
151987 Statewide Safety InitiativeKey Elements
- DAS-Risk intervened with WC finance model
- Risk established work comp component of
Self-insurance fund - Risk negotiated insurance terms and conditions
with SAIF on behalf of all agencies - SAIF bills Risk Management for all costs
- Risk bills agencies through annual Risk Charges
and biennial budget process
16Workers Compensation Costs
171987 Statewide Safety InitiativeKey Elements
- Time Loss Occurrences became the Performance
Measure - Goal to reduce serious injuries by 50 over a
four year period - Agency heads given data and reports that tracked
progress
18Environmental Changes in Oregon
- SAIF reorganized its business model - 1989
- Major legislative changes to work comp statutes
- 1987 changes Occupational Disease (stress
claim) compensability - 1990 Mahonia Hall - Labor / Management Advisory
Group - 1990 Special Session
19Safety Initiative 1987 to 1992
20Statewide Safety Initiative 1987 to 1992
21Statewide Safety Initiative1992-2005
- Safety Advisors lead internal agency programs
- Injured Worker Management systems
- Timely claim filing
- Early RTW at Temporary Transitional Duty
- Return to Work
- Claim resolution
- Coordination with Employment Claims
- SAIFs Oregon Claims Team, Return to Work
Consultants and Loss Consultants
22Statewide Safety Initiative1992-2005
23What we are seeing in 2006
- Claim frequency is flat
- Medical costs are increasing about 10
- Temporary disability payments are based on wages
that are increasing - Legislative changes increases the states risk
related to compensability, disability awards and
vocational services - State is now paying on 10 full open plan years
- Actuaries claim cost projections for past years
are increasing rapidly
24Costs are rising
- Work Comp Risk Charges Increasing
- 55
- for 2007-09 biennium
25We remember
- If we do not learn from history, we shall be
compelled to relive it. - True.
- But if we do not change the future, we shall be
compelled to endure it. - And that could be worse.
26What are we doing to change the future?
- DAS, Independent Actuaries and SAIF have reviewed
statewide cost and claim data - DAS-Risk Safety Consultant has interviewed key
agency Safety Advisors - Safety Operations Council convened to provide
ongoing input and collaborate on activities and
best practices - Executive Steering Committee led by DAS
Directors Office and including technical expert
and stakeholder representatives is sponsoring and
guiding
272006 Safety and Wellness Leadership Initiative
- Focus Areas
- Organizational Culture
- Employee Feedback
- Management Systems
- Self-Assessment Tool
- Data analysis
- Target high risk / high opportunity
28Safety and Wellness Leadership Initiative - Key
Strategies
- Management leadership and accountability
- Individual Involvement Accountability
- Safety and Wellness Programs
- Learning Processes Training Communication
29Impact on the Employee Experience
ORGANIZATIONAL VALUES
Individual Employee Experience
MANAGEMENT PROCESSES
ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
30Future opportunities.