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PROFILE : My journey to Professional Registration - Innocent Gininda

Innocent Gininda shares his journey to becoming a registered Professional Engineer (PrEng), emphasizing the importance of mentorship, early preparation, and understanding ECSA requirements. He offers advice to aspiring PrEngs, highlighting the value of diverse feedback and a positive mindset. My journey to becoming a registered Professional Engineer (PrEng) culminated successfully in November 2024. I was fortunate to begin my career at a company with a Commitment and Undertaking (C&U) Agreement with ECSA and a robust mentorship program. This commitment to training engineers to the standard required for Professional Registration provided me with essential resources and a structured path to track my experience against ECSA requirements. Early exposure to these expectations instilled a positive outlook on registration and solidified my desire to achieve this milestone. My views on Professional Registration have remained consistently positive throughout this journey. Working alongside ...

Is Covid-19 making safety the foundation of all construction practices?

Covid -19 is showing the Construction industry that safety is not something to be negotiated, or siloed, or ignored. Moving forward do you think safety is going to be the foundation of construction practices??



After COVID-19, there will be a new normal for construction safety

If we want to achieve higher standards for our safety culture in the U.S, we need to make it an operational priority.


More than talks and taglines, safety is operational. It needs to be embedded in all processes, led from the top down, empowering teams to do what’s right and supporting proper habits on the ground.

Currently our construction industry is responding to the measures required to operate a site safely during the outbreak of COVID-19. Management of personnel, safety processes, and access to information in real-time is now a requirement and no longer a “nice to have”. 

Those who have not put stringent and comprehensive safety processes in place - those who haven’t woven safety into their field operations at every step- are scrambling to come up with solutions to keep their sites open and to keep their workers safe.

In contrast, those that have evolved their processes are the ones providing safer job-sites for workers in this pandemic. They are merely adjusting and implementing minor changes to keep up with best practices and mandatory guidelines. They are the companies that will continue to lead after our country recovers from this pandemic.​

With the times requiring fast and furious evolution of practices to keep teams healthy and safe, we could learn from this pandemic and in turn, create a safer tomorrow. This moment should be a catalyst for our industry. 

By improving standards to protect our most important assets, our people, we can ‘grab the bull by the horn’ and revolutionize ourselves, coming out the other end more efficient, with safer, healthier job sites.

More than ever, let’s focus on prevention. Let’s use leading indicators to focus on what we’re doing right. Let’s give our field teams, or an anonymous worker, the ability to record near misses, and report on unsafe practices without fear of repercussions. Let’s utilize the wealth of data that if captured electronically, could spark a conversation or determine an informed decision that leads to improvements. Let’s provide our teams with proper facilities to support better hygiene and reduce the possibility of future virus transmissions, or sickness resulting from inadequate facilities.

It all starts with one. Whether it is a global pandemic, or catalyzing positive change, it begins with one. 

So, what can we all do moving forward?

Start with the end in mind. What do you want to stand for? What do you want your workers and trade partners to think of you? What data do you need access to, to truly make a difference and lift your company to the next level? 

Embrace change, analyze your processes, find areas for improvement and then search for the best possible solution. There is something for everyone out there, the speed in which technology solutions are being applied to construction over the past decade is breathtaking. 

Data… data… data. Get SME’s from across all functions of your company, collate what everyone believes to be the critical information (information that if they had access to, they could make true data-backed decisions), tie it to processes ensuring the data can be captured, then prioritize and start your journey. 

Come together and share our best thoughts, ideas, practices. Mind sharing and creating industry-wide, data-driven safety baselines for measuring our true safety numbers is paramount. 

When we all do our part to advance this industry, when we all have real talk with ourselves and others in the industry, we will come out the other side better for having done so. Safety is not something to be negotiated, or siloed, or ignored. Moving forward, safety should be the foundation of our practices.

This article was first published here

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