Design-Based Safety

Overlooked is the Need to Tell the Public About Our Skills

Authors

  • David MacCollum

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v54i2.67

Keywords:

design-based safety, informed public, communication

Abstract

In the classic nursery rhyme, the skills of the butcher, the baker and the candlestick-maker are clearly defined. Protecting life, limb and property are generally ignored, however, with the belief that most people avoid dangerous hazards and that accidents will not happen. There is a lack of understanding that a hazard is usually dormant until a change of circumstance occurs and the hazard becomes armed and able to cause harm. When a hazard produces harm in terms of death, injury or damage, it is often identified only as an “accident,” and the existence of a hazard is ignored.

Author Biography

David MacCollum

David V. MacCollum, 96, was a past president of ASSE and was a member of the first U.S. Secretary of Labor’s Construction Safety Advisory Committee [1969-1972]. He specialized in safety research and technical assistance on high-risk hazards to enterprise, insurance companies, universities, trade associations, attorneys, and government for over 20 years and was involved in the development of rollover protections and other safeguards and innovative construction methods and procedures. Mr. MacCollum held a B.S. degree from Oregon State University and was a Registered Professional Engineer and Certified Safety Professional. (in memoriam)

Design-Based Safety

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Published

2018-10-01

How to Cite

MacCollum, D. (2018). Design-Based Safety: Overlooked is the Need to Tell the Public About Our Skills. Journal of System Safety, 54(2), 5. https://doi.org/10.56094/jss.v54i2.67