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The “Safety Certification for Transportation Project Professionals” (SCTPP) program is aimed at the thousands of transportation project supervisors, foremen, and inspectors.
Wed October 12, 2016 - National Edition
The American Road & Transportation Builders Association (ARTBA) has launched a groundbreaking professional certification program developed by safety leaders from some of the nation's top transportation infrastructure firms, the insurance industry, organized labor and government.
The “Safety Certification for Transportation Project Professionals” (SCTPP) program is aimed at the thousands of transportation project supervisors, foremen, inspectors, project planners and designers who could make a huge, industry-wide safety impact by learning core competencies necessary to identify and mitigate potentially life-threatening on-site risks.
The SCTPP program is also intended to create a “safety benchmark” for all future civil engineering and construction management program graduates who are interested in employment with industry-leading firms.
“Ensuring that our project sites are the safest possible environments for all who work in and travel through them can't just be the safety director's job,” say ARTBA Chairman David Zachry, president and CEO of the Zachry Corporation in San Antonio, Texas. “There are no safety 'accidents.' There are safety incidents. And we need to do our best to prevent them. It is our moral obligation and it is good business practice.”
Zachry, who has been a driving force behind development of the SCTPP program, adds: “Our goal, collectively working through ARTBA and its Foundation, is to cause a demonstrable reduction in the number of deaths and injuries that occur on and around transportation project sites each year. We believe we can do that if all of the key decision makers, from project inception through completion, have safety top of mind. This program will identify and reward those who have demonstrated competency in this critical management area.”
ARTBA recruited a high-level, independent certification commission to establish operational policies to guide the SCTPP program and provide leadership, governance and on-going oversight.
The nine-member commission is co-chaired by Ross Myers, CEO & chairman of Allan Myers, Inc., the largest civil construction and materials supply firm in the Mid-Atlantic region, based in Pennsylvania, and David Walls, president & CEO of Austin Industries in Dallas, Texas, one of the nation's largest diversified construction firms with an annual volume of $2 billion and over 7,000 employee-owners.
The ARTBA Transportation Development Foundation (ARTBA-TDF) engaged Professional Testing, Inc., an internationally-recognized consulting firm specializing in helping industries and government agencies develop and manage effective, fair, valid, reliable and legally defensible assessment and evaluation services to work with industry safety leaders in developing the SCTPP program. It has been designed to meet the rigorous protocols required for accreditation by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the International Organization for Standardization ISO/IEC 17024.
Identification of the target audience, core competencies to be tested, and development of the exam questions themselves has involved key safety personnel from: Zachry Construction, Lane Construction, Granite Construction, the Kiewit Infrastructure Group, Oldcastle Materials, The Vecellio Group, Barriere Construction, Superior Construction, Liberty Mutual Insurance, the Arch Insurance Group, the Laborers' Health & Safety Fund of North America, the Texas Department of Transportation, the National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health, Virginia Tech, The Center for Construction Research & Training, Plastic Safety Systems, InVia Pavement Technologies, and Mobile Barriers.
The two-and-a-half hour SCTPP exam has up to 120 multiple-choice questions. They probe knowledge in assessing project risks, creating project safety plans, implementing and conducting on-going evaluation of a site-specific operational safety plan and conducting incident investigations.
The ARTBA-TDF is now accepting applications for the exam, which will be administered nationwide at Pearson VUE testing centers, via the SCTPP website, www.puttingsafetyfirst.org. The test will be offered during three windows in 2017: (Jan. 16-Feb. 17, March 13-April 14 and Oct. 16.-Nov. 17). The application and exam fee is $500.
To be eligible to sit for the exam, candidates must meet one of the following eligibility requirements:
Option 1
1. Three years' full-time or equivalent experience* in the transportation construction industry.
2. Completion of an OSHA 30 or 510 course.
Option 2
1. Bachelor's degree in engineering or construction management with two years' experience* in the transportation construction industry.
2. Completion of an OSHA 30 or 510 course.
Option 3
1. Associate or technical degree in safety with two years' experience* in the transportation construction industry.
*Experience is defined as a job classification including, but not limited to, laborer, operator, foreperson, superintendent, project manager, construction manager, engineer, safety professional, risk manager, inspector, surveyor, or estimator. Internships qualify as experience. Experience must be within five years of applying for certification.
Upon passing the exam, the professional certification will be valid for three years. Recertification will require documented, continuing learning on the topic and retesting.
To learn more about the SCTPP program and to access “FAQs” on it, visit www.puttingsafetyfirst.org, or contact ARTBA Senior Vice President of Safety & Education Brad Sant ([email protected]) at 202.289.4434.
The ARTBA Transportation Development Foundation, a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt entity established in 1985, supports a wide portfolio of research, education and public awareness programs and activities. In addition to the SCTPP program, this includes:
• Developing and executing safety training programs and materials for the U.S. Departments of Transportation and Labor (training more than 8,000 industry employees each year);
• Operating the National Work Zone Safety Information Clearinghouse (www.workzonesafety.org) that has over 200,000 visitors annually;
• An educational scholarship program for children of highway workers killed or permanently injured on the job;
• Conducting specialized management workshops and webinars;
• Economic research projects and special reports on transportation investment;
• Awards programs that recognize industry excellence in community service, safety, environmental stewardship and the advancement of diversity; and
• Financial support for the permanent transportation exhibit at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.