Job Safety/Hazard Analysis By Mr. Warren K. Brown, Session# 6 Monday February 22, 2010
16:10 - 16:50
Job hazard analysis is a process of reviewing the job
elements looking for deviations from the normal
expected process and with the expected outcome of
controlling these differences to reduce the potential
for accidents. A job is selected and a team then
analyzes the job for deviations that could result in a
future loss producing incident. Control methods for
each deviation are determined and then factored into
the job.
Presenter – Mr. Warren K. Brown,
Warren K. Brown, CSP, ARM, CSHM, is retired from GM, Delphi & DMAX and taught Safety at Sinclair Community College for 13 years.
Co-founder of the ASSE Kittyhawk Chapter, he was selected "Safety Professional of the Year" by the ASSE All Ohio Council (1987) and ASSE Region VII (1988-89). He was elected ASSE Region VII vice president 1989 - 1993 and 1997 - 2001. He completed two terms as ASSE vice president of Professional Development in 2005. He received the ASSE Culbertson Award in 2006. He was president of the ASSE 2008-2009.
He received the NSC’s "Distinguished Service to Safety" award in 1992. He is Past President - Ohio Valley Section of AIHA and past chair of the National AIHA Confined Space Committee. He serves on the Board of Directors of the Dayton Miami Valley Safety Council, and was chairman in 1980-81. He was elected to a 6 year term on the board of directors of the Institute for Safety and Health Management in 2007 and is currently vice chair. He holds a BS in Industrial Technology from Ohio University, MBA from the University of Dayton and an ARM from the Insurance Institute of America. In 1988, he was named a General Motors "Safety Fellow", the highest General Motors individual safety award.