3M becoming major player in the worker safety sector
MINNEAPOLIS — 3 M worke r s around the world are wowing companies and crowds at conventions by rappelling down buildings, oil rigs and ceilings.
It’s all part of the company’s safety-education efforts that have caught the eye of regulators as well as customers.
“We don’t want to drop off our equipment with (customers) and just say, ‘Well, good luck,’ ” said Don Garvey, a 3M personal safety division technical service specialist. “The end product is not the ear plugs or safety goggles (or harnesses) we sell. It’s that people get to go home at night with all 10 fingers and toes.”
3M, headquartered in suburban Minneapolis, now has a 48-foot safety trailer and crew that spearheads the global training effort, one that has intensified since the acquisition of Twin Cities neighbor Capital Safety 19 months ago for $2.5 billion, the largest in 3M’s fabled history.
“Purchasing Capital Safety has definitely made 3M a major, major player in fall safety protection,” said Lydia Baugh, spokeswoman for the International Safety Equipment Association.
This month, 3M announced its safet y protec tion unit will become even big ger with the acquisition of Scott Safety for $2 billion. The purchase, 3M’s second-largest ever, is expected to close before the end of the year and will make it the largest in the fragmented $43 billion industry that also includes Honeywell/ Miller, MSA Safety, FallTech and Sellstrom Manufacturing.
Scott specializes in firefighting equipment, especially breathing apparatus and gas detection equipment.
The Capital Safety purchase increased 3M’s portfolio of hard hats, earplugs, respirators and go g gles by 20,000 produc ts, including harnesses and other fall protection. It now is growing the division through its research arm, launching 100 new worker-protection products and enhancements in the last year and a half. Those include a new “self rescue” zip line to use with harnesses, and a new harness that redistributes body weight so there’s less wear on the shoulders and back.
Beyond U.S. factories and con- struction sites, 3M workers are teaching safety on Middle Eastern oil rigs and windmills in Virginia.
3 M t r a i n e d a n d p r o v i d e d equipment to the construction crews that built the Detroit Red Wings’ new $733 million hockey arena, the $700 million State Farm regional headquarters in Tempe, Ariz., and the $400 million Wells Fargo Towers in downtown Minneapolis.
It trained more than 1, 200 employees and subcontractors working on a Ryan Cos. project in Tempe in a single day, said John Gaddini, Ryan’s regional safety director.
The training was free because Ryan Cos. was already a customer. Gaddini estimates it would have cost $50,000 if 3M did not provide it.
“That trailer is a fantastic training tool. ... I was just in awe with everything that is contained inside the trailer,” said Tyrone Taylor, Minnesota OSHA director of workplace safety consultation. “They are doing a great service to the construction industry with this trailer and all the safety training they do. It’s much needed, very beneficial and a new way to do hands-on training.”
Workplace falls accounted for 13 deaths and 950 injuries across Minnesota during the last fiscal year.
3M officials believe the new safety outreach may lower customers’ workplace accidents while simultaneously boosting sales. If successful, it will help increase 3M’s $5.7 billion safety and graphics business by 1 to 3 percent a year bet ween now and 2020, officials said.