Exploring the differences in safety climate among mining sectors

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Emily J. Haas PATRICK L. YORIO CASSANDRA L. HOEBBEL
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Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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Abstract

This study revealed significantly less favorable perceptions of the existing organizational safety climate among workers in the underground coal-mining sector compared with those in the industrial-minerals and sand, stone and gravel (SSG) sectors. Consequently, it is important to consider pragmatic ways in which health and safety management systems (HSMS) in coal mines can alter processes to improve these perceptions. Given the interdependencies of safety climate factors and HSMS elements, researchers explored mineworker perceptions of the supportiveness of organizational safety climate factors among mineworkers and identified significant differences in perceptions across sectors. In this paper, we suggest that health and safety professionals in underground coal mining and organizations with fewer resources or less mature HSMSs focus on these factors to bolster support for proactive safety performance. Potential barriers to implementing or improving relevant HSMS elements and ideas to help foster more favorable perceptions of organizational safety climate are also discussed.
Citation

APA: Emily J. Haas PATRICK L. YORIO CASSANDRA L. HOEBBEL  Exploring the differences in safety climate among mining sectors

MLA: Emily J. Haas PATRICK L. YORIO CASSANDRA L. HOEBBEL Exploring the differences in safety climate among mining sectors. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration,

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