From Leadership to Liability
There’s a big difference between a company that has a safety program and one that actually lives it.
At one of my past plants, managers flew in from Canada to lead safety meetings. And you know what? They were good. You could tell they cared about people and the work. They showed up. They followed through. They earned respect.
But over time, things changed. The follow-through stopped. Promises faded into policy. Safety became another box to check — a performance for auditors instead of a real commitment to workers. That’s when the message shifted, and the weight of “safety” landed squarely on the shoulders of the people doing the work.
At first glance, it can even look like a compliment. “You’re our best guy, so we need you to handle this.”
But in reality, it creates a broken system — one that transfers responsibility without giving authority.
The “Three Obligations” Game
- You are responsible for your own safety.
- You are responsible for the safety of others.
- You are responsible for stopping unsafe acts.
At first glance, those sound fair — even noble. On paper, it reads like empowerment. But in reality, it often becomes an escape hatch for management. When something goes wrong, they point to the poster and say, “See? You’re responsible.”
That’s not safety culture. That’s delegated liability safety — accountability without authority. It looks like teamwork, but it’s really a clever way to pass the risk down the line.
Liability is the number one-way companies dodge responsibility. I cover this in greater depth in my free eBook Corporate Safety Show by Design.
What It Feels Like on the Floor
Try doing your job while dodging malfunctioning equipment, outdated repairs, and questionable wiring. You report it. You follow the steps. Nothing happens — unless you turn into a full-time nag.
It’s exhausting. And it’s dangerous.
Instead of support, you get safety slogans. Instead of follow-through, you get blame. They call it accountability. It feels like abandonment.
Workers burdened
“Workers burdened by safety responsibility while managers pass blame — a snapshot of modern safety culture where accountability is pushed down, but solutions never move up.”
A Rigged Game of Responsibility
This is what experts call a blame culture in safety. The workers are handed responsibility, but the power to fix the problem stays at the top. That gap creates a rigged system: when something breaks, the worker takes the fall, and management walks away clean.





