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Description

Employees don’t stop reporting hazards because they don’t care. They stop because the system teaches them not to. Dr. Ayers breaks down the hidden cultural signals that shut reporting down — and the leadership behaviors that reopen the flow.


 
🔑 Why Employees Stop Reporting Hazards
1. Nothing happens after they report

The #1 killer of reporting is lack of visible action. When employees report hazards and see:


2. Past reports led to blame or punishment

Even subtle negative reactions — eye‑rolling, questioning motives, lecturing — teach employees that reporting is risky. If reporting feels like it puts a target on their back, they stop.


3. Supervisors unintentionally discourage reporting

Common mixed signals:


4. They don’t want to be seen as complainers

If the culture labels reporters as:


5. They think leadership already knows

A surprising number of hazards go unreported because employees assume:

This assumption is often wrong — and dangerous.


 
🔧 How to Fix It (Leadership Actions That Reopen Reporting)
1. Close the loop every single time

The fastest way to rebuild trust is to show employees their report mattered. Leaders should:

Even if the fix is delayed, communication keeps trust alive.


2. Remove fear from the reporting process

Supervisors must respond with:

Psychological safety is the foundation of hazard reporting.


3. Make reporting easy and low‑friction

Employees report more when the process is:

Barriers kill reporting.


4. Celebrate reporting as a positive behavior

Shift the narrative from “complaining” to contributing. Highlight reporters as:

Recognition changes culture.


5. Show that reporting leads to real improvements

When employees see hazards being fixed, they start reporting again. Visible action is the strongest motivator.


 
🎯 Episode Takeaway

Employees stop reporting hazards when the culture teaches them it’s pointless or risky. They start again when leaders make reporting safe, valued, and effective.

Hazard reporting is not an employee problem — it’s a leadership system problem.