You are on page 1of 25

Quarterly Driver’s Forum for

1
3rd Quarter (Contractors)
© 2017 National Safety Council
1
Road Transport Safety
Statistics 2022

-Total No. of MVI as per FAR submitted is 14. 8 of which are counted as under EDC
operational control
-MVI consist the 44% for this quarter(January to March) total incident tally.
2 © 2017 National Safety Council 2
Road Transport Safety
Statistics January-
March 2022
Note:
Contractor’s MVI
1. Counted MVI’s = 8:
The total No. of
MVIs as per FAR
submitted is 11, 3
of which is not
under operational
control.

1. Other contractor
not shown on the
Tally did not incur
any MV related
Incidents

3 © 2017 National Safety Council


MVI

LEYTE'S Jan-March 2022 MVIs -Root Causes

4 © 2017 National Safety Council


January 2022 Motor
Vehicle Incidents
Discussion
January 18, 2022 MV Incident at Brgy. Montebello, Kananga Leyte
SV Involved: TG Services
Passenger: 2 EDC employee from MBPP operations.
Details: At around 1620H of January 18,2022 the Malitbog Facility rented vehicle (Nissan Urvan) was
bumped by a truck loaded with sugarcane upon crossing the main highway of Montebello,Kananga ,
Leyte. The impact caused the damage of the left side body of the service vehicle.

5 © 2017 National Safety Council 5


January 2022 Motor
Vehicle Incidents
Discussion
January 27, 2022 MV Incident at Brgy. Montebello, Kananga Leyte
SV Involved: OLTC and DCV
Passenger/s: 1 TG Services Clerk
Details: At around 6:45AM at Ormoc Cogon Heights, an MVI occurred when an OLTC rented service
vehicle(IRS) was struck by an incoming DCV Foton SV at a corner of the said subdivision. The driver
of the OLTC SV did not fully stopped on the T intersection while crossing to the Main Brgy. Road. The
DCV driver speed was at 30-40kmph in a residential area. No one was hurt during the Incident.

Dash Cam Video


6 © 2017 National Safety Council 6
January 2022 Motor
Vehicle Incidents
Discussion
January 19, 2022 MV Incident at Ormoc City near Tent City
SV Involved: Head
Passenger/s: None
Details: At around 7:15am, on his way to work, the driver of the EDC rented toyota innova
noticed a 6-wheeler delivery van parked in an inclined position awaiting entry to their yard.
While the toyota innova is approaching slowly, the delivery van suddenly moved backwards
and collided with the toyota innova on its middle right side section. No one was hurt during
the incident.

7 © 2017 National Safety Council 7


January 2022 Motor
Vehicle Incidents
Discussion
January 9, 2022 MV Incident uphill going to Base 7
SV Involved: Toto ent. and FBI
Passenger/s: None
Details: At around 0820H, 9Jan22, a contractor boomtruck loaded with portalet tank, was
sideswipe by an oncoming contractor passenger van at a sharp curve portion of the road
near Base 7 causing a minor dent on the side of the passenger van. No person injured during
the incident.

8 © 2017 National Safety Council 8


January 2022 Motor
Vehicle Incidents
Discussion
March 7, 2022 MV Incident at near GCGI U3 Scrubber
SV Involved: DCV
Passenger/s: None
Details: A rented boomtruck was hit on the fire protection pipelines and a pvc pipe
near at the unit 3 scrubber and steam header area that resulting to a broken pvc
pipe(conduit wiring) and damage on the boomtruck passenger step board.

9 © 2017 National Safety Council 9


January 2022 Motor
Vehicle Incidents
Discussion
February 11, 2022 MV Incident at MBPP outside parking
SV Involved: First Philippines Skills
Passenger/s: None
Details: Acontractor rented service vehicle catering personnel hit another parked vehicle in the
area. While the driver of the said contractor was maneuvering a reverse parking the rear right side
of the vehicle hit the rear left side of another parked vehicle at MBPP outside parking area. The
incident causing a minor dent on both vehicle, no person injured during the incident.

10 © 2017 National Safety Council 10


Dash Cam and GPS

11 © 2017 National Safety Council 11


Fatigue

PowerPoint - For use in conjunction with 5-Minute Safety Talk


®

12© 2017 National


© 2017Safety Council
National Safety Council
Fatigue

• 1 in 3 adults
doesn’t get
enough sleep

• Approximately
37% of the U.S.
workforce is sleep
deprived

13 © 2017 National Safety Council


How Much Sleep Do You Need?
• Varies by individual –
no magic number
• You should sleep as
much as you need to
• Most adults need
between 7-9 hours each
day
• Teens need 9-10 hours
• Younger children need 10-12 hours of sleep
14 © 2017 National Safety Council
Aside from getting enough sleep, special attention
should be paid to the quality of sleep. There are
steps you can take to promote regular, healthy
sleep known as sleep hygiene.
15 © 2017 National Safety Council
Tips from the National Sleep Foundation
✓ Create and follow a sleep schedule. Go to bed and wake up at the
same time every day
✓ Ensure your bedroom or sleeping area is quiet and dark - keep the
temperature moderate - neither hot nor cold
✓ Make sure your bed is comfortable and remember that bedtime is
for sleeping and not reading or watching TV
✓ Avoid the use of gadgets that emit light, especially smartphones and
tablets. Using these devices before going to bed can inhibit restful
sleep
✓ Don’t eat a heavy meal right before bedtime
16 © 2017 National Safety Council
Effects of Sleep Deprivation
Chronic sleep deprivation has
been shown to raise the risk
for:
✓ Depression
✓ Obesity
✓ Cardiovascular disease
✓ Reproductive complications

These issues can lead to decreased productivity


and increased healthcare costs for employee and
employer alike.
17 © 2017 National Safety Council
Effects of Sleep Deprivation
In the short term, lack of
sleep can cause issues
with:
• Tardiness
• Absenteeism
• Concentration
• Listening to others
• Solving problems
• Making decisions
• Decreased attention,
memory recall &
vigilance

18 © 2017 National Safety Council


If lack of sleep continues, the body builds a
“sleep debt” for every hour of lost sleep.

Getting extra sleep can reduce the debt, but if


sleep deprivation becomes long term, it may
not be possible to reverse the effects.

19 © 2017 National Safety Council


As your body’s sleep debt
increases, the more likely
you are to experience
microsleeps—a brief
episode of sleep which can
last anywhere from a
fraction of a second up to
30 seconds.

During a microsleep, you are temporarily


unconscious.

20 © 2017 National Safety Council


The National Sleep Foundation reports…
- Highly fatigued
workers are 70% more
likely to be involved in
an incident resulting in
injury

- Workers who report


disturbed sleep are
nearly twice as likely to
die in a work-related
incident.
21 © 2017 National Safety Council
Drowsy Driving
A recent AAA Foundation report estimated 328,000 crashes
annually due to drowsy driving, with 109,000 resulting in
injury and 6,400 resulting in a fatality.

Drowsiness affects drivers in


much the same way as
alcohol:
✓ Reduced attentiveness
✓ Slowed reaction time
✓ Impaired judgment

Driving while drowsy increases crash risk by nearly 300%!

22 © 2017 National Safety Council


Whether you are driving on the
job, commuting to or from work,
or are off the clock…make sure
you are not too drowsy to
drive.
• Pull over to a safe place and
take a 15-20 minute nap if
possible

• If you are extremely fatigued,


don’t attempt to drive; call a
friend, family member,
colleague, fleet dispatch, cab
or ride share to complete
your trip safely
23 © 2017 National Safety Council
Avoid long
commutes and
extending
working hours Take several
Eliminate light short breaks
and noise from throughout the
your sleep shift and
environment remain active
during breaks
National Sleep
Foundation Drink—but
Keep a Recommendations don’t overdo—
consistent caffeinated
bedtime and for Workers
beverages as
wake schedule needed
throughout shift
Use a “buddy
Wear dark
system” of
glasses to
other
block the sun
coworkers to
on your
keep each
commute home
other alert

24 © 2017 National Safety Council


Driver’s Forum 2022

Other
Concerns

25 © 2017 National Safety Council 25

You might also like