Friday, May 1, 2009

The Safety Professional

Something a bit more lighthearted is on tap this Friday. I wish everyone a safe weekend.

(Note: This floated around the internet at one point. I saved it. Unfortunately, I have no idea of its original source or author.)


Sandwiched tightly between Top Brass and the teaming masses sits a wild-eyed individual madly singing a safety tune. He's the most misunderstood, maligned and unsung person in all the world of business. He's the proverbial

"SAFETY PROFESSIONAL"


  • This fellow's a little bit of all strata's....a member of none.

  • To the employee or worker he's a tool of management; to management, he's just another employee.

  • He finds his job interesting.

  • He speaks for management from the "Ivory Tower" and then runs out to the Production Area, Warehouse or Work Site to hear how it sounds.

  • He must keep his head in the "brass' board room", his feet in the muck.... a difficult position to keep from falling on his butt.

  • He has the curiosity of a cat....the tenacity of a mother in law...the determination of a taxi driver...the nervous system of a race car driver...the digestive capacity of a goat...the simplicity of a jackass...the diplomacy of a wayward husband...the hide of a rhinoceros...the speed of a rocket and the good humor of an idiot.

  • He has the busiest, shrewdest, plottingest, worryingest, most thoroughly washed brain of any human.

  • His mail basket is always full, his desk is a constant mess and his calendar looks like cave drawings.

  • Nobody has been given the run-around as often, has been passed so many bucks, is left holding so many bags, and has cut his way through so much red tape.

  • The Safety Professional keeps the coffee plantations, aspirin plants, liquor distilleries and the midnight oil companies in business.

  • He must tread lightly over mountains of eggs, knowing where to tread and, more importantly, when and where NOT to tread.

  • You'll find him everywhere...shouting loudly over the din of a bunch of roaring engines, whispering softly in the hallowed precincts of thick-carpeted offices.

  • Whenever there is an accident, the SAFETY PROFESSIONAL is often called in to explain why and how it happened.

  • He's expected pull rabbits out of nonexistent hats; when the job is thankless, he gets it.

  • He must engender interests in good housekeeping to people who live in garage sale clutter...promote wider responsibility to people who have a narrow focus ... preach safety to people who think they don't need it.

  • He must listen to the phrase, 'that's always the way we've done it," until he vomits.

  • Despite all the careful planning he is usually found dangling on a deadline...he's the original cat on the hot tin roof...in the middle of a muddle and of course LATE.

  • The master of understatement, he must make fire protection sound as essential as religion and an accident cost sound like the national debt. He's suppose to be a "specialist" who can breath new life into committees and meetings... leadership into management... cooperation into supervisory personnel... responsibility into employees/workers.

  • He must inspire without propaganda... propagandize without being obvious.

  • He parks his 1980's jalopy between the boss' new Mercedes and the janitor's SUV.

  • When he's clever, it goes unnoticed...when he stubs his toe, the world is there to see and mock it.

  • To him a headache is normal; he'd have ulcers if he could afford them.

  • He has more critics than Harry Truman.

  • He meets more people who think they know more about safety than the company has conveyor hooks.

  • He can never be right.

  • When he simplifies, he's pandering.

  • When he gets a little technical, he's over their head.

  • Half the people wonder what he does... the other half know what he does but think he's doing it wrong!

  • When an idea turns out lousy and after the blame has been thoroughly kicked between the employee/worker, foreman and supervisor, it winds up in his lap.

  • More people bend his ear than anybody else's.

  • Everybody thinks he always has time to stop and listen to a joke...hear a gripe...attend a meeting... serve on a committee.

  • He does, and winds up taking most of his work home.

  • He has no peer in the realm of praise, propaganda and procrastination.

  • He knows he's right; only the world thinks he's wrong.

  • If he has an idea, it was stolen.

  • However, a stolen idea is research!

  • Where else do you think the background material for this sad tale of woe about a Safety Professional originated.

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