Neil George Safety System

The Neil George Safety System (or 5-Point Safety System) is an occupational health and safety program developed for and used in underground mining. The system was developed in 1942 by Canadian engineer Neil George, who at the time was an employee of Inco Limited in Sudbury, Ontario. The program is used throughout Canada and internationally.[1][2]

The program is made up of five components, described in one of its iterations as:[3]

  1. Check the entrance to work places.
  2. Check that the working place and equipment are in good order.
  3. Check that the job is being worked safely.
  4. Discuss a topic of safety.
  5. Do the employees know how to continue to work safely?

Points one through three are done by the employee, and verified by the supervisor upon arrival to the workplace. The fourth step is a safety discussion between the employee and the supervisor, while the fifth is a verification by the employee that they have the correct training, experience, and motivation to continue working safely. This is also verified by the supervisor prior to their leaving the workplace.[2]

The general system of pre-task risk assessments has been developed independently multiple times, and as such variants on the Neil George Safety System appear under different names in different localities.[4] A common generic name for the practice is "Take 5 for Safety".[5]

References

  1. ^ "Five Simple Steps to Safety". Canadian Mining Journal. 1 October 2004. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  2. ^ a b "Safety reminder". Holmes Safety Association Bulletin: 7. July 1997.
  3. ^ Sellar, J (October 1975). "The impact of the five point safety system on the underground sections of the Zinc Corporation Limited and New Broken Hill Consolidation Limited". Proceedings of the Symposium on Occupational Safety in Mines. Queensland, Australia.
  4. ^ Havinga, Jop; Shire, Mohammed Ibrahim; Rae, Andrew (8 April 2022). "Should We Cut the Cards? Assessing the Influence of "Take 5" Pre-Task Risk Assessments on Safety" (PDF). Safety. 8 (27). doi:10.3390/safety8020027.
  5. ^ Joy, Jim; Griffiths, Derek (January 2007). "NATIONAL MINERALS INDUSTRY SAFETY AND HEALTH RISK ASSESSMENT GUIDELINE" (PDF). Minerals Industry Safety and Health Centre. Queensland University of Australia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 2 January 2024.