TRSA celebrates members’ safety excellence

3 March 2020


NORTH AMERICA

Four linen and uniform service industry TRSA members and two associates (suppliers to the industry) are 2020 SafeTRSA Excellence Award winners, recognised for achievements that produced or reflected safety gains due to support from top management, employee involvement, training or good communication.

Barely 18 months in existence, Cooperative Laundry, a Kearny, New Jersey hospitality laundry start-up, is building a safety culture that encompasses all employees and focuses most tightly on engineers. Safety is viewed as the foundation and pinnacle of the business, with these pillars (principles) upholding the goal of zero unsafe acts, failures and surprises: ownership (safety is everyone’s job), questioning attitude (to discover unsafe situations), knowledge, communication and teamwork. Engineers have had just two reportable incidents, prompting their better adherence to standard operating

Novo Health Services, the Atlanta-based operator of four healthcare linen service laundries, demonstrates safety excellence through management leadership, employee involvement, worksite analysis, hazard prevention and control, and safety and health training. The company’s Safety and Health Manual includes 25 comprehensive policies for which specific training has been developed and presented as appropriate. An online program assigns monthly tasks with required completion dates, including training, fire drills, emergency action plan review, OSHA-required record review and submission, and local- and corporate-team audits specifying corrective action.

A 100-year provider of industrial and retail medical linens and a member of the Healthcare Linen Services Group, Logan’s Uniform, Shelbyville, Kentucky, has a long history of little or no safety issues. It had no recordable incidents in 2019 and hasn’t had a lost-time incident since January 2017. The company attributes this success in part to a “culture of care” supported by years of safety expertise and daily monitoring. Employee behaviour is vigilantly observed and corrected as needed. When an individual performs any hazardous task, a colleague or manager is present for its duration. Incentives or bonuses are provided for no incidence. 

UniFirst Corp.’s Partners in Safety program awards points to employees each quarter based on their safety metrics and on-the-spot for getting “caught being safe.” This international uniform service chain’s program encourages employees to set safety goals and rewards them when these goals are met. A website dedicated to the program provides points-awarding engagement opportunities and enables employees to redeem points for their choice of thousands of items. The longer an employee works safely, the more points accumulated and the more valuable items that can be redeemed. 

Moving to Associate winners, the Ecolab Textile Care division’s role in the company’s Goal Zero program protects employees and laundry customers. Its bulk verification process for digitally verifying the correct product is delivered to the right customer in the right tank also protects the environment. The St. Paul, Minnesota-based division uses Intelex, a global web-based system for compliance and management functions to foresee safety concerns and eliminate risks before they lead to accidents. A safety course each year and behind-the wheel training every three years is given to drivers. CarChip, Virtual Risk Manager (VRM) and Mentor applications guide behavior changes and prevent incidents. In chemical production, a global lockout/tagout policy reduces injury risk; technicians working in laundries benefit from an electrical safety training program that guides repair of chemical dispensers.

Rotomoulded cart manufacturer Meese of Ashtabula, Ohio, having identified hazards in its moulding process, used the “hierarchy of controls” [assessing best opportunities for hazard protection from PPE (least protective) to hazard elimination (most)] to redesign moulding workstations. The new units dramatically reduce the risk of slips, trips and falls related to working from a small, elevated, open platform. Stair and platform redesign also decreased ergonomic hazards and fatigue. Platforms were widened and made with adjustable legs to accommodate different sized workers. Railings and safety gates were added to the platforms and wood was used for floors and stairs instead of steel. Bins for tools, parts and resin powder and trash receptacles became integral to the stations, eliminating the need to step off the platform to retrieve these. 

These winners will be honoured at TRSA’s 10th Annual Legislative Conference on 25 March in Washington. 

 



Privacy Policy
We have updated our privacy policy. In the latest update it explains what cookies are and how we use them on our site. To learn more about cookies and their benefits, please view our privacy policy. Please be aware that parts of this site will not function correctly if you disable cookies. By continuing to use this site, you consent to our use of cookies in accordance with our privacy policy unless you have disabled them.