Wright-Patterson Airmen earn top safety award

  • Published
  • By Daryl Mayer
  • 88th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
The Star award, which is the highest level of recognition under the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's Voluntary Protection Program, was presented to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base officials here Dec. 9.

Mandated in 2006 by then Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, VPP is a cooperative relationship between OSHA, management, union and employees working together to ensure a better level of safety and health protection.

Since the mandate, scores of bases across the country have scrambled to meet the rigorous criteria required for the Star award. The initial site visit beginning the VPP effort for the 88th Air Base Wing took place in July 2006 and identified 146 opportunities for improvement, termed "gaps" in VPP parlance. Wing officials had to address those issues in order to receive Star recognition.

"Receiving recognition of this magnitude is a big deal and was the result of a real team effort between the 88th Air Base Wing, OSHA, Air Force Materiel Command and with our union partners," said Col. Bradley Spacy, 88th Air Base Wing commander. "We are a safe organization because we are trained to do things safely, but the real challenge is living it every day."

There is a large slate of compliance issues and documentary requirements that must be met under VPP. The final hurdle is the onsite program audit where a team of OSHA inspectors visit workplaces and conduct interviews with all levels of employees to gauge the level of commitment to a culture of health and safety.

"There are 29 installations currently moving forward in VPP and we expect to add another 15 in 2009," said Michael McGhee, Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary Energy, Environment, Safety and Occupational Health. "This is a program that is gaining speed and you're [the 88th Air Base Wing] right at the tip of the spear."

OSHA officials established VPP in 1982 for use in private industry and the program has achieved dramatic results. When a Department of Defense task force was looking for a way to reduce the number of accidents, those in industry suggested that VPP was the answer.

OHSA credits VPP with saving 862 companies an estimated $1 billion since 1982. Conversely, preventable injuries and illnesses cost the DOD an estimated $10 to $21 billion annually, according to the National Safety Council.

"It's recognition of our safety and health programs here on the base and taking care of our people," said Cynthia Bryant, VPP program manager. "It shows that we're looking out for each other that the leadership has commitment to the safety and health of the people here on the base, that the employees are actively involved and looking out for each other." 

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