Constitution of a Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment (HIRA) team requires a cross-functional approach to ensure comprehensive safety coverage. For a Members team covering EHS, Operations, Maintenance, Quality, and Electrical departments, the team should be structured to include both technical knowledge and operational decision-making authority.
Step-wise Constitution of the HIRA Team
Step 1: Identify Key Departmental Representatives
Select individuals with deep knowledge of their respective areas.
EHS (Team Leader): Expert in hazard identification methods, regulatory compliance, and risk assessment techniques.
Operations Supervisor (team leader): Provides input on routine tasks, process flows, and machine operations.
Maintenance Engineer (team leader): Expert in non-routine tasks, machinery hazards, and repair safety.
Electrical Engineer (Member): Focuses on electrical hazards, shock, fire hazards, and hazardous area classification.
Quality Inspector (Member): Identifies potential safety risks arising from product inspection, testing, and material non-conformance.
Step 2: Define Roles and Responsibilities
EHS: Facilitates the HIRA, maintains documentation, and ensures compliance.
Operations: Identifies hazards during production, ensures operators follow safe practices.
Maintenance: Identifies hazards during maintenance, ensures machine guarding.
Electrical: Ensures electrical equipment is safe and safe-work procedures (LOTO) are in place.
Quality: Suggests control measures that do not compromise product safety.
Step 3: Train and Prepare the Team
Before conducting the assessment, train the team in:
HIRA methodology (Step 1-6).
Risk Matrix development (Likelihood x Severity).
Hierarchy of Controls (Elimination, Substitution, Engineering, Administration, PPE).
Step 4: Conduct Workplace Hazard Identification (Walkthrough)
The team should walk through the plant, identifying potential issues.
Physical: Moving parts, high temperatures.
Chemical: Dust, gas, hazardous substances.
Electrical: Frayed wires, improper earthing.
Step 5: Assess Risks and Implement Controls
Risk Evaluation: The team collaboratively assigns a risk score for each hazard.
Control Implementation: The team uses the hierarchy of controls to mitigate high/medium risks, starting with engineering controls (e.g., machine guards) before relying on PPE.
Step 6: Document, Review, and Communicate
HIRA Register: Formally document findings.
Toolbox Talks: Communicate hazards and controls to all employees, particularly workers doing the daily tasks.
Regular Reviews: Review annually and new incorporate monthly or when significant changes occur in the plant (new machines, new processes).
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