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Description

Episode 54 explains the Management of Change (MOC) element of OSHA’s Process Safety Management Standard (29 CFR 1910.119). Dr. Ayers focuses on why MOC is one of the most critical—and most commonly broken—PSM elements. The episode emphasizes that most major chemical incidents happen during or shortly after change, not during steady‑state operations.

The core message: If you don’t control change, change will control your risk.


 
🧭 What MOC Is Designed to Do

The MOC process ensures that any change that could affect process safety is:

MOC prevents “surprise hazards” from creeping into the system.


 
🔍 What Counts as a Change Under PSM

Dr. Ayers stresses that MOC applies to more than just equipment changes. It includes:

The episode highlights that temporary changes are the most dangerous, because they often bypass formal review.


 
⚠️ Common Examples of Changes That Require MOC

If it can affect the process, it requires MOC.


 
📝 What an MOC Must Include

A compliant MOC process must document:

The episode emphasizes that MOC is not paperwork—it’s risk management.


 
🧪 Why MOC Fails in Real Facilities

Dr. Ayers highlights common breakdowns:

These failures often lead to catastrophic incidents.


 
🔄 The Link Between MOC and Other PSM Elements

MOC directly connects to:

A change in one element ripples through the entire system.


 
🧑‍🏫 Leadership Responsibilities

Safety leaders must:

The episode’s core message: MOC is the gatekeeper that prevents uncontrolled risk from entering your process.