ANSI / ASSE Z15.1-2012 Motor Vehicle Operator Safety Standard

May 22, 2012

Designed for use by those having the responsibility for the administration and operation of motor vehicles as a part of organizational operations.

Effective August 20, 2012, this standard provides guidance for organizations regarding:

  • Occupant Restraints;
  •  Impaired Driving;
  •  Distracted Driving;
  •  Aggressive Driving;
  • Journey Management;
  •  Fatigue;

Operational polices including:

  •  Driver Qualifications;
  •  Vehicle Management;
  •  Incident reporting;
  •  Business  and personal use of vehicles;
  •  Driver-owned and leased vehicles;
  •  Rental cars

“This standard gives employers a credible tool that is reflective of best practices. Employers who operate noncommercial fleets can learn from commercial fleet operators on matters of common interest,” ASSE professional member and ANSI/ASSE Z15 committee member Tim Healey, director of safety, at The Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Co. (HSB), said. “After all, common management goals, regardless of who the fleet operator is, should include crash avoidance – and all of the fatalities, injuries, property damage and expenses that result – as well as economical/efficient operation. No employer can afford to have an employee operate under the influence, text, or fall asleep while driving on company business, whether it is in an 80,000 pound tractor trailer or a 3,600 pound sedan.”

If you do not now have a  ”written motor vehicle safety program that defines organizational requirements, responsibilities and accountabilities for drivers and motor vehicle safety; a written safety policy that includes communicating management’s concern for the health and well-being of drivers throughout the organization;  a system of responsibility and accountability in order to ensure effective implementation of a vehicle safety program,” this new ASSE standard can help you implement these best practices.

Get the standard.

Compliance comments: “The use of American National Standards is completely voluntary; their existence does not in any respect preclude anyone, whether he/she has approved the standards or not, from manufacturing, marketing, purchasing, or using products, processes, or procedures not conforming to the standards.”

 SPEAKINGOFPRECISION SAYSIt is likely that this standard will be come the basis for regulatory enforcement as its best practices are adopted.


Shop Safety Guided Tour PMPA NTC 23 April 2012

April 11, 2012

At PMPA’s National Technical Conference, attendees will be presented with a wealth of programs to help them ‘further their degree in precision machining.’

I am pretty excited about  the Honing the Tool Whisperer  in you session; Gary Griffith’s  (Griffith Training) GDT session on orientation tolerances; Automation and Robotics presented by Don Engles of Productivity Inc.

I’ll be presenting a session monday afternoon titled Shop Safety- A Photo Tour. No sermon, not a lot of 1910. here comes trouble. Just a tour of shops demonstrating best safety practices, and maybe some opportunities to improve.

When I say best practices, this is an illustration of what I'm talking about. How does your housekeeping compare to this?

I don’t expect folks to fly to Chicago to see my Shop Safety Photo tour.

But I know that the one’s who do will leave with a vision of what best practices can be, and a handful of links to authoritative OSHA references.

Plus the latest news on the issues that we are engaging with OSHA  in our industry.

Program details

Technical track, Quality Track, Management Track, Leadership Gold Certification session, Critical Process Thinking in the Quality Profession.

Yes, we’ve got a great program lined up for you.

Register


Counting Using Scales- Free Webinars For You

November 10, 2010

Counting parts with scales is not rocket science.

But getting the accuracy in the count done efficiently is a challenge akin to a moonshot if you are the person that has to resolve the piece count discrepancy paperwork…

 

 

When accurate counts are critical

 

The first webinar is called Best Practice in Piece Counting.

It covers

  • Principle and benefits of piece counting with a scale
  • Application areas of piece counting solutions
  • Challenges associated with counting
  • Solutions and best practices

The second webinar Smart Weighing Solutions for Lean Production  will show you how to minimize waste using accurate scale based counting systems and Statistical Quality Control.  

The first half is a nice review of Mettler’s own lean journey in manufacturing.

The second half has a number of case studies regarding parts, shops, and customers like ours.

We see on time delivery and significant reduction in stock inventories as the primary advantages of using such systems.

 Plus you will save time and money.

We relied on Mettler technology in the labs that I worked in.

I’m forwarding you these links to maybe help you

Find a better weigh…

Share

 Mettler Toledo offers two  free, on demand webinars that will help you understand  (and resolve) the issues of using scales to accurately count component parts.


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