Reasonable Suspicion Training for Supervisors (Drugs and Alcohol)

Status: In the Works (Details Coming Soon)

Few situations put a supervisor under more pressure than suspecting an employee may be impaired at work. The stakes are high, and the risks are real: safety incidents, equipment damage, regulatory exposure, legal liability, and a loss of trust across the workforce.

This workshop equips supervisors with the grounding, procedural clarity, and practical confidence needed to respond appropriately when impairment is suspected. Participants will learn how to recognize indicators, apply reasonable suspicion standards, follow consistent response protocols, and communicate and document observations in a professional and defensible manner.

The session emphasizes a balanced approach that protects employee dignity while ensuring safety, compliance, and operational continuity.


What You Will Learn

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Explain the operational and safety risks associated with employee impairment
  • Understand national and industry trends related to drug and alcohol use in the workplace
  • Apply organizational policy and legal considerations consistently, including privacy and due process
  • Recognize behavioral and physical indicators of impairment using validated observational criteria
  • Follow a structured response protocol to protect coworkers and reduce risk
  • Document and communicate observations objectively and ethically
  • Practice supervisor conversations through facilitated role-play scenarios

Workshop Agenda

Topics include:

  • Impact of Employee Impairment
    Case examples and the operational consequences of undetected or mishandled impairment

  • Workplace Statistics
    Review and interpretation of national and industry data affecting manufacturing workplaces

  • Legal and Policy Considerations
    Reasonable suspicion standards, confidentiality expectations, and key legal intersections

  • Defining Reasonable Suspicion
    How to improve observational accuracy, reduce bias, and document objectively

  • Supervisor Action Steps
    A clear protocol for initiating the conversation, removing employees from duty, involving HR, and requesting testing when appropriate

  • Skill Practice
    Interactive scenarios to rehearse conversations, decision making, and documentation in a safe learning environment


Who Should Attend

This workshop is designed for manufacturing leaders who may be responsible for immediate decisions during high-risk situations, including:

  • Frontline Supervisors and Team Leads
  • Production Managers and Department Managers
  • Safety Managers and EHS Leaders
  • HR Leaders supporting policy compliance and employee relations
  • Plant Managers responsible for overall site safety and risk

Expected Outcomes

Participants will leave with:

  • Clear understanding of what reasonable suspicion means and what it does not mean
  • A repeatable, defensible process for addressing suspected impairment
  • Improved confidence in difficult supervisor-employee conversations
  • Stronger documentation practices that reduce organizational risk

Duration

Half Day (2-4 hours. Still in development)


Cost

$275 per participant
or
$2,500 per private session (on-site or hosted for your team)


Registration

Coming soon. This workshop is currently in development and will be posted once dates and location are finalized.

Driving Performance Improvement by Building a Safety-First Culture (Half-Day Workshop)

Status: In the Works (Details Coming Soon)

Safety culture is not just a compliance requirement. It is a performance driver. Driving Performance Improvement by Building a Safety-First Culture equips supervisors and safety leaders with a research-informed understanding of how safety behaviors influence productivity, quality, retention, and operational stability.

Built on proven principles from safety science, human factors, and organizational culture research, this workshop shows how strong safety cultures lead to measurable benefits like fewer incidents, reduced variability, higher quality outcomes, and stronger employee loyalty.

Participants will examine how leadership behavior is the primary mechanism through which safety values are communicated, reinforced, or undermined. Using real-world case studies from high-reliability organizations like Alcoa and DuPont, the session demonstrates how safety excellence can become a competitive advantage.


What You Will Learn

By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Identify the hidden cost of weak safety culture, including rework, downtime, turnover, and insurance impacts
  • Understand how industry leaders use safety performance as a strategic differentiator
  • Recognize the pivotal influence supervisors have on safety attitudes, compliance, and daily norms
  • Translate safety principles into consistent leadership behaviors that shape long-term outcomes

Workshop Agenda

Topics include:

  • Why Safety Culture Matters
    Cultural drivers, behavioral modeling, and the operational and financial value of safety excellence

  • Case Study: Alcoa
    How a Fortune 500 manufacturer used safety as a unifying pillar to improve productivity and profitability

  • Leadership’s Role in Safety Culture
    The behavioral science of influence, credibility, and norm-setting

  • Group Activity: Cultural Drivers
    Participants assess workplace leadership behaviors that reinforce or undermine safety performance

  • Building a Safety-First Culture
    A four-pillar framework to turn safety values into measurable routines and expectations

  • Action Planning
    Teams build a targeted plan for strengthening safety culture in their own facility


Who Should Attend

This workshop is recommended for manufacturing leaders responsible for daily execution and safe operations, including:

  • Frontline Supervisors and Team Leads
  • Safety Managers and EHS Leaders
  • Plant Managers and Operations Leaders
  • HR and Training Leaders supporting supervisor development
  • Continuous Improvement Leaders supporting culture change

Expected Outcomes

Participants will leave with:

  • A clearer understanding of how safety culture impacts business performance
  • Practical behaviors supervisors can reinforce immediately
  • A framework for turning safety expectations into consistent daily routines
  • A draft action plan to drive measurable safety and performance improvements

Duration

Half Day


Cost

$275 per participant
or
$2,500 per private session (on-site or hosted for your team)


Registration

Coming soon. This workshop is currently in development and will be posted once dates and location are finalized.