7 Principles for Effectively Managing Safety & Health

The March 2005 BP Texas City refinery explosion was a catastrophic event that killed 15 workers and injured over 170, caused by a distillation tower overfilling with hydrocarbons during a unit restart, leading to a vapor cloud explosion ignited by a spark. The disaster exposed deep-seated organizational and safety failures, including poor process safety management, outdated technology, inadequate oversight, and critical hazards from placing occupied trailers too close to operating units. These failures led to significant fines, legal action, and major industry safety reforms.
Jim Stanley, FDRsafety President, oversaw one of the investigation teams following the tragedy. An overview of the event, including the findings of the team Jim led, can be found here.
The 2005 BP Texas City refinery explosion remains one of the most consequential industrial disasters in U.S. history. The investigation work conducted at that time — including the team led by Jim Stanley, former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor at OSHA — revealed systemic organizational failures that remain relevant across industries today. While safety management systems, terminology, and regulatory guidance have evolved over the past two decades, the fundamental lessons from that tragedy remain applicable. Based on those lessons and decades of subsequent experience, Jim Stanley encourages employers
and safety professionals to consider the following updated principles for building and sustaining an effective safety and health program in 2025.
1. Leadership Accountability Is Non-Negotiable
Senior leadership must be visibly responsible and accountable for worker safety. Safety performance cannot be delegated away or treated as a compliance exercise. Executives, managers, and supervisors must actively own risk decisions, allocate resources, and hold themselves accountable for outcomes. Effective safety cultures are driven by leadership behavior, not slogans or paperwork.
2. Safety Is a Staff Function That Supports Operations
Safety professionals exist to support operations — not to replace management responsibility. Line supervisors and managers remain accountable under the OSH Act for providing safe and healthful workplaces.
Safety staff provide:
• Technical expertise
• Regulatory interpretation
• Program structure
• Training support
• Auditing and verification
Operational leaders must integrate safety into daily decision-making, planning, and
execution.
3. Keep Safety Programs Practical, Understandable, and Usable
Overly complex or overly technical safety programs often fail at the point of execution. If frontline employees and supervisors cannot understand or apply the requirements, the program will not be effective. Clear expectations, plain language, and practical procedures outperform lengthy documents filled with jargon. A program that works in the field is more valuable than one that only looks good on paper.
4. Use OSHA Standards and Enforcement Guidance as a Practical Roadmap
OSHA regulations, interpretation letters, Review Commission decisions, and the current OSHA Field Operations Manual (updated in 2023) provide practical and enforceable guidance for employers. Reading and applying the plain language of the standards — rather than over-engineering beyond regulatory intent — remains one of the most reliable ways to design defensible safety programs.
5. Measure What Matters: Use Both Lagging and Leading Indicators
Injury and illness data (lagging indicators) remain important because they reflect real outcomes and regulatory recordkeeping obligations. However, they should not be used in isolation.
Modern safety programs also rely on meaningful execution (also known as leading indicators), such as:
• Timely and regular hazard identification and correction
• Quality of job hazard analyses
• Effectiveness of training
• Management of change reviews
• Audit findings
• Employee participation metrics
Lagging indicators remain relevant and should never be ignored or replaced by leading indicators. Leading indicators are generally measurable indicators that the safety and health management system is being implemented well (or not). The goal is not to chase metrics, but to use both leading and lagging indicators to understand risk exposure and system performance.
6. Engage Workers and Unions as Active Safety Partners
Employees and their representatives are essential to effective hazard identification and risk
control. Workers are often the first to recognize unsafe conditions or procedural
weaknesses.
Successful organizations:
• Encourage reporting without fear of retaliation
• Involve employees in hazard assessments and solutions
• Engage unions constructively where applicable
• Act on concerns before injuries or incidents occur
Meaningful participation strengthens trust, improves hazard recognition, and supports sustainable compliance, resulting in fewer injuries and illnesses.
7. Focus on Serious Injury and Fatality (SIF) Prevention
Modern safety programs prioritize identifying and controlling exposures that could reasonably result in serious injury or death.
This includes attention to:
• High-energy hazards
• Non-routine work
• Maintenance and startup activities
• Contractor oversight
• Permit-required and high-risk tasks
Preventing catastrophic events requires deliberate attention to organizational controls, work planning, and management oversight — not just behavior-based programs.
Closing Perspective
The lessons from the BP Texas City tragedy remain relevant because the underlying causes — leadership failures, weak accountability, ineffective controls, and poor risk awareness — still appear in serious incidents today. Strong safety performance is achieved not through complexity, buzzwords, safety mumbo jumbo, or checklists, but through:
• Accountable leadership
• Practical programs
• Clear expectations
• Worker involvement
• Consistent execution
If you have questions or would like assistance evaluating or strengthening your safety and
health programs, FDRsafety can help.


