🔑 Key Takeaways
1. Safety Gets Burdened With Extra Duties
Dr. Warren explains that many companies treat safety as the catch‑all department. Common “extra” responsibilities include:
Environmental compliance
DOT and fleet safety
Fire protection
Emergency planning
Mental health champion roles
And countless other miscellaneous tasks
These additions dilute focus and stretch safety professionals thin.
The issue isn’t that safety pros can’t handle diverse responsibilities. It’s that organizations often:
Add duties without removing others
Fail to provide resources or training
Don’t understand the complexity of what they’re assigning
This leads to burnout and inconsistent performance.
Dr. Warren emphasizes the importance of:
Clarifying expectations
Documenting responsibilities
Communicating workload impacts
Asking for prioritization guidance
Boundaries protect both the professional and the safety program.
Formal leaders often underestimate the breadth of what safety handles. When they understand the “junk drawer” effect, they can:
Allocate resources
Reduce unnecessary tasks
Support strategic focus
Improve overall safety outcomes
This conversation validates what many safety professionals feel but rarely say out loud. It also gives leaders a framework to rethink how they assign responsibilities—and how to support the people keeping their workforce safe.