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Face to
Face
Wayne Swann
Safety Programs Supervisor
Wayne Swann was born and raised in Wyoming and followed the oil
boom to Alaska in 1976 when ARCO transferred him to help develop
Prudhoe Bay. He liked the idea of moving to Alaska because, as far
as he could tell, it was just like Wyoming, only bigger and with
more opportunity. Wayne started working with Alyeska as a safety
consultant contractor in 2003 and joined the staff as Safety
Programs Supervisor in April 2005.
Wayne has four children, three dogs and one ’96 Corvette. He
spends his free time fishing, hunting, woodworking and obeying all
traffic laws while driving his Corvette.
Q: What are your duties?
My primary responsibility is to implement Alyeska’s Loss
Prevention System® (LPS). This system is designed to promote
regulatory compliance and prevent incidents that result in losses
including personal injuries, equipment or property damage, product
quality incidents such as spills and operational or system
inefficiencies. We don’t want any near misses either.
I lead a team of six staff members to proactively identify and
eliminate factors that could cause or contribute to injuries,
losses or regulatory noncompliance. A major LPS goal is helping
Alyeska reach “Target Zero,” or zero workdays lost due to
job-related injuries.
Q: How are you implementing LPS?
LPS fosters workplace culture and management techniques that
proactively avoid losses by promoting and rewarding safe behavior.
We are building this culture by holding workshops beginning in
late August to introduce the LPS to key Alyeska managers. We plan
to expand the program by providing 8-hour training sessions for
all Alyeska employees beginning in November. Our timeline is to
fully implement the LPS by the second quarter of 2006.
Q: How will Alyeska maintain LPS after full implementation?
The LPS must become a core corporate value. All managers must
fully support the system and foster worker commitment and
accountability at every level. All employees must systematically
assess risks, train to avoid risks, investigate and analyze
incidents to understand their causes, and continually assess and
improve operations to minimize loss.
Q: What are the key challenges to implementing LPS?
We must communicate the benefits of LPS so that everybody
understands the value of doing LPS-related tasks. It is also going
to be a huge task to adapt the LPS so that it will work for a
diverse work force of employees and contractors who perform a wide
range of tasks, often in extreme environments, along an
800-mile-long pipeline system.
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