Working Together For Safety * This is a story of how you and the Company work together for your safety while on the job. In 1957, our safety record was one of the best in the history of the mills. The combined frequency rating for all mills was 3.28 as compared with the 7.6 average rate for the textile industry throughout the State. Several of the individual plants qualified for North Carolina Department of Labor awards for their outstanding safety achievement during the year. How do such commendable records come about? They don’t just happen. They are not attained overnight, either. To maintain safe work ing conditions in a large manufacturing enterprise requires organized effort. For thousands of em ployees to work one or many years without a dis abling injury requires cooperation in that effort and safety-consciousness every day of the year. The matter of plant safety at Fieldcrest has been handled on an organized basis for many years. The Central Safety Committee, composed of general management, mill managers and superintendents and staff department heads, meets quarterly to re view any accidents that have occurred and ta form ulate policies and procedures for the prevention of injuries. General management, working through the Cen tral Safety Committee, provides the protective equipment essential to employee safety. Guards on machines, plant and machine maintenance, mill housekeeping, etc., are phases of this work. Ac cepted safety and engineering standards are applied throughout our safety program. At each mill there are a plant safety committee, composed of the superintendent and all foremen, and an employee inspection committee. These groups make regular inspections and report any conditions or practices considered to be unsafe. Through these channels the superintendent re ceives information enabling him to take action to eliminate any hazards or unsafe practices that have been observed. At each of its meetings, the plant safety committee reviews any accidents or near- accidents that have occurred and efforts are made to prevent their recurrence. First aid is available in all departments from first aid attendants who generally have received training in first aid through the Red Cross. Employees are encouraged—and the safety rules require it—to re port immediately to the first aid attendant or the supervisor any injury received, no matter how slight. Should the injury be severe enough to re quire attention beyond first aid, the Company main tains a Medical Department to serve employees. From the foregoing, it is evident that much organization, planning and follow-up go into the safety program. It is equally plain, however, that all of this cannot prevent injuries to the person who disregards the established safety rules or who runs the risk of injury by taking chances. The safety re cord at Fieldcrest was made by the vast majority oi employees who are always mindful of their awn safety and the safety of others. The record was good last year and we can work together to make it even better in 1958. I Central Safety Committee H. W, Whitcomb. •R. A. Harris S. R. Fifield R. R. Roberts W. B. Lucas P. D. Emery E. L. Brown C. J. Frank William McGehee R. L. Wilkes o J. o. Thomas Dr. J. A. Sanford J. W. Norman W. R Kiser R. H. Tuttle A. G. Singleton H. E. Williams Howard Barton J. E. Barksdale S. T. Anderson F. E. Barron J. H. Ripple H. T. Bundy C. A. Davis J. P. Foster R. F. Sambleson T. R. Ray J. P. Powell F. T. Suttenfield J. W. Amall J. R. Baker N. F. Young.. J. S. Eggleston J. M. Norman F. W. Klein Virgil Hall J. G. Cunningham R- C. Going R. J. Adkins D. A. Purcell D. E. Simons C. P. Wilson J. M. Rimmer Walter Danhoff Plant Safety Is An Important Function of Management; Central Safety Committee, Above, Formulates Safety Plans and Policies. . THE MILL whistle