
The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast Episode 55 - Incident Investigations for Process Safety Management
Episode 55 explains the Incident Investigation element of OSHA’s Process Safety Management Standard (29 CFR 1910.119). Dr. Ayers focuses on what must be investigated, how investigations should be conducted, and why the goal is learning, not blame.
The core message: If your investigation ends with “operator error,” you didn’t investigate.
🔍 What Must Be Investigated Under PSMPSM requires investigations of:
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Incidents involving catastrophic releases of highly hazardous chemicals
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Near misses that could have resulted in a catastrophic release
Dr. Ayers emphasizes that near misses are often more valuable than actual incidents because they reveal system weaknesses without causing harm.
⏳ When Investigations Must BeginOSHA requires:
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Investigations to start within 48 hours of the incident or near miss
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Prompt evidence gathering before conditions change
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Early involvement of knowledgeable personnel
Delays lead to lost information and weaker conclusions.
👥 Who Should Be on the Investigation TeamThe team must include:
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At least one knowledgeable employee
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A contractor representative (if contractors were involved)
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Someone trained in investigation techniques
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People familiar with the process and equipment
The episode stresses that diverse perspectives prevent tunnel vision.
🧭 What the Investigation Must DetermineA PSM investigation must identify:
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The chain of events
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The underlying causes (not just symptoms)
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Systemic failures in procedures, training, equipment, or management systems
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Corrective actions to prevent recurrence
Dr. Ayers emphasizes that the goal is to uncover why the system allowed the event, not who made a mistake.
📝 Required DocumentationThe investigation report must include:
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Date and description of the incident
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Factors that contributed to the event
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Findings and recommendations
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Team members’ names
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Corrective actions and timelines
Reports must be kept for five years.
🛠️ Corrective Actions: The Heart of the ProcessThe episode stresses that corrective actions must be:
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Assigned to specific individuals
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Tracked to completion
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Verified for effectiveness
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Documented
A beautiful report with no follow‑through is meaningless.
🧪 Common Weaknesses Highlighted in the EpisodeDr. Ayers calls out frequent failures:
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Blaming workers instead of systems
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Investigations that stop at the first obvious cause
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Poor evidence collection
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No near‑miss reporting culture
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Corrective actions that are vague or unenforced
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Repeating the same findings year after year
These weaknesses indicate a reactive, compliance‑only approach.
🧑🏫 Leadership ResponsibilitiesSafety leaders must:
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Encourage reporting of incidents and near misses
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Ensure investigations start quickly
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Select qualified, objective team members
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Demand root‑cause‑level analysis
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Support corrective actions with resources
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Communicate lessons learned across the facility
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Foster a learning culture, not a blame culture
The episode’s core message: Incident investigations are one of the most powerful tools in PSM — but only if leaders use them to learn, not punish.
