Who Owns Safety? Turning Near Misses Into Action
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Near misses happen in schools every day—blocked walkways, crowded prep rooms, equipment squeezed into corners, or cords taped down just enough to get through class. They rarely make headlines, but they reveal something critical about how safety actually operates inside school systems.
In this episode of Safer Ed, we move beyond recognizing near misses and explore what determines whether they lead to real change. Through a thoughtful, expert-to-expert conversation, we unpack how responsibility for safety becomes diffused across roles, why workarounds often replace systemic fixes, and how leadership decisions around budgets, schedules, staffing, and space quietly shape risk.
Listeners will hear how schools can build clearer reporting pathways, convert everyday close calls into actionable data, and create cultures where speaking up leads to improvement—not blame.
In This Episode, We Discuss
Why “shared responsibility” can stall action without clear ownership
How workarounds hide system strain
The emotional barriers to reporting near misses
Leadership decisions embedded in space, scheduling, and purchasing
Turning near-miss patterns into planning and budget conversations
The role of dedicated safety leadership positions
Practical first steps districts can take immediately
Key Takeaways
Near misses are warnings that arrive before harm does. Schools become safer when responsibility for acting on those warnings is clear, supported, and sustained.
Resources
Visit edcircuit.com for more Safer Ed episodes and resources.
Visit Science Safety for pathways and modules.
This episode was generated in part using AI tools. All content was reviewed and approved by our editorial team before publication.