Site icon Safety Driven – TSCBC

Safety Meetings: Challenges and Considerations

Tailgate meeting

What the NSC expects you to do

If your organization is looking to implement regular safety and health meetings, some things need to be considered first. Regardless of the size or scope, safety meetings should fit comfortably into workers’ schedules, with the goal of motivating workers to take an interest in safety and health. The National Safety Council notes that safety meetings also should be used to:

However, you may face a number of challenges, NSC states, including:

To combat these and other barriers to employee involvement, NSC advises looking for ways to keep workers actively engaged in safety. One way to do this is by recognizing employee contributions in a public way, such as by printing names and achievements in a workplace newsletter or issuing plaques at participation ceremonies. Let workers know their involvement is noted and appreciated.

To prevent a safety meeting from running off track, it is important to have a written agenda highlighting the key points of the meeting. The agenda also should include who will speak when and on what topic. This will help prevent speakers from straying from their designated subject material, NSC states. Practice running through the meeting before it starts so everyone is comfortable.

Additionally, keep the meeting short – a safety meeting should feature a maximum of three ideas. If you try to address too many items, workers will not absorb everything. Meetings should be no longer than 30 minutes and should take place in a comfortable location. Make sure you allow enough time at the end for employees to provide feedback. NSC recommends circulating the meeting agenda in advance to give workers time to think about issues they would like to bring up.


Stay up to date and sign up for one of our newsletters for topics on Site Safety, Commercial Vehicle Safety and more!

Exit mobile version