About
Achieving a Zero Harm workplace is a goal which we should all be striving towards. According to the Department of Labour, in 2010 seventy-five workers were killed at work and there were 5,945 cases of serious harm at an estimated social and economic cost of $16 billion.
The Zero Harm in the Workplace conference is your perfect opportunity to hear how health and safety is being managed in some of NZ’s most respected organisations. Held in both Auckland and Wellington, this conference will provide you an opportunity to network with your peers and hear from leading health and safety experts at a location which is convenient for you.
Featuring this year:
- Group Exercise: Keeping your staff safe in an emergency
- Mini Workshop: Avoiding H&S fatigue in the workplace
- Mini Workshop: Improving communication of H&S goals across the company
- Roundtables: Drugs & alcohol; Workplace safety cultures; Stress & Fatigue
Customise your learning experience with a separately bookable post conference Masterclass on “Extending the Accident Investigation Process” with Peter Newsome.
Registration Specials
Train your team with the special 2 for 1 discount and if you register and pay before Wednesday 8th February 2012, you save up to $300 with our Early Bird deal.
Masterclass
Full Day Masterclass | Extending the Accident Investigation Process
3 March 2012, Crowne Plaza, Auckland | 9.00am – 4.30pm
29 March 2012, Amora Hotel, Wellington | 9.00am – 4.30pm
Some of the core goals of the accident investigation process are to identify why the accident happened, identify both new and existing hazards and put processes in place to ensure the risks to employee safety are minimised. In this full day Masterclass you will learn to extend the accident investigation process from a step-by-step requirement into a proactive approach to preventing further injury in the workplace.
Masterclass attendees will cover:
- Understanding standard procedures in the accident investigation process
- Effective investigation and interviewing techniques
- Dealing with external parties during the investigation
- Handling the outcome of the investigation
- Creating a supportive and “blame-free” environment
- Analysing workplace accident history – does a pattern exist? If so what can be done about it?
- Using lessons learnt to improve health and safety processes and to become proactive with employees
Facilitated by Peter Newsome, Director, Ironclad Safety
Peter Newsome has been practising Health and Safety and specialising in Injury Prevention since 2001. Prior to that Peter spent 22 years as a Police Officer, 12 years in uniform on the front line and 10 more years investigating serious crime as a Detective and Intelligence Analyst. Peters uses his years of investigative training to look at the facts as facts and to provide evidence based solutions.
Agenda
Agenda: Day 1
8:30am
Registration and coffee
9:00am
Opening remarks from the Chair
Auckland: John Beattie, Executive General Manager Zero Harm & Insurance, Downer New Zealand Limited
Wellington: Chris Roberts, Corporate Affairs Manager, New Zealand Oil & Gas Ltd
9:10am
DOL Address: Harm reduction programmes
Auckland: Jason Papuni, Team Leader - Auckland, Department of Labour Workplace Group
Wellington: Marcus Nalter, Health & Safety Inspector, Department of Labour
9:55am
WHO Initiative: A comprehensive approach to influence health and wellness in the workplace
• Achieving zero harm through assessing and emphasising all four avenues
• The benefits of holistic approach to NZ workplace
• The impact of diverse wellness programmes on the safety culture
Eta Lilic, Health & Safety and Wellness Manager, BNZ
In March 2011 Eta was invited to the WHO International Consultation on Healthy Workplace and along with 63 others worldwide, Eta become a WHO Healthy Workplaces consultant.
10:40am
Morning Tea
11:00am
Group Exercise: Keeping your staff safe in an emergency
• Examples and review of emergency and contingency plans
• How to ensure worker safety in emergency planning - practical steps you can take
• Discussion: Role and responsibilities of the OHS manager on the day
Sandra Pedersen, Director, Kestrel Group
12:00pm
Roundtables
12:00pm
Roundtable 1: Managing Drug and Alcohol Abuse in your organisation
• How do you test for illicit substances?
• How have you approached managing “legal highs” in your workplace?
Auckland: Kirk Hardy, CEO, NZDDA
Wellington: Jason Whatuira, General Manager, NZDDA
12:00pm
Roundtable 2: How do you maintain and improve upon workplace safety culture?
• How have you identified where a culture shift is needed?
• What challenges have you encountered promoting a workplace safety culture?
Jen Breed, Working Wisdom
12:00pm
Roundtable 3: How can you prevent stress and fatigue within your workforce?
• What does a healthy workplace mean to you?
• Do you have any systems in place to combat the effects?
• Have you noticed key precursors to stress and fatigue?
Auckland: Janice Riegen, Clinical Nurse Specialist – Occupational Health and Safety, Waitemata DHB
Wellington: Maeve Neilson, HSSE Southern, NZ Bus Ltd
12:45pm
Lunch
1:45pm
Mini Workshop: Avoiding H&S fatigue in the workplace (Mini Workshop)
• Focus on the positive aspects of workplace health and safety
• How can you tell if employees are suffering from information overload?
• Engage employee’s interest in workplace health and safety and making it stick
Jen Breed, Manager, Working Wisdom
3:15pm
Afternoon Tea
3.30pm
Case Study: Preventing injury in high-risk situations (Case Study)
• Following pre-set protocols
• Making employee safety a priority despite time constraints
Carl Stent, National Manager – Safety & Wellbeing, Fulton Hogan
4.15pm
Networking Drinks
Agenda: Day 2
9:00am
Welcome back from the Chair
9:05am
From the Courts: Reviewing recent health and safety cases
• The impact of Bull and Speedy v Utumapu HC PMN CIV - 2011
• Current areas of focus for the Department of Labour
• Are penalties effective and reflecting the breach?
Auckland: Sarah-Lee Stead, Associate, Kensington Swan
Wellington: Rachel Burt, Senior Associate, Kensington Swan
9:50am
Looking at human and organisational factor in accidents
· Review organising frameworks for better understanding (i) why people sometimes do seemingly inexplicable things and what can be done about it; and (ii) the barriers and defences that can protect “imperfect people operating within imperfect organisations”.
· Explore human and organisational fallibility and the importance of taking a systems approach in addressing this fallibility.
· Review psychological processes that influence the attribution of human success and failure.
Hillary Bennett, Director, Leading Safety
10:35am
Morning Tea
10:55am
Case Study: Getting your workforce back on its feet (Case Study)
• Keeping your employees working
• Assessing capability to perform tasks
• Providing flexibility to ensure complete rehabilitation
• Make a fast return to work business as usual
Auckland: Andy Inder, Head of Safety and Wellbeing, NZ Post Group
Wellington: Marty Buckley, Safety and Wellbeing Consultant, NZ Post Group
11:40am
Making practice match paper
• Examples where plans have not matched practice
• Necessity of a thorough audit process
Hamish Brown, Managing Director, Concordia
Author of the Workplace Audit and Managing Director of Concordia, Hamish specialises in measurement and improvement of safety culture to reduce workplace fatalities and serious harm accidents.
12:25pm
Lunch
1:25pm
Mini Workshop: Improving communication of H&S goals across the company (Mini Workshop)
• Improving cross cultural communication
• Overcoming literacy barriers
• Identifying your communication vessels and analysing their effectiveness
• Communications alone are not enough – what else can be done to support it?
Auckland: Presenter to be confirmed
Wellington: Tim Corbett, Director, Thinkspace
2:45pm
Afternoon Tea
3:05pm
The critical importance of individual “risk competence” in achieving Zero Harm
Eric Holliday, Independent Safety Consultant
3:50pm
Understanding the accident investigation process
• Importance of fully investigating any incident
• Managing the risk and providing steps and processes to minimise future incidents
• Creating a “blame-free” culture
Peter Newsome, Director, Ironclad Safety
4:35pm
Closing remarks from the Chair & end of conference





