Employee involvement is essential to improving pollution control. Organizations like Dow Chemical have been able to use employee involvement to reduce pollution. It begins by understanding, as Dow does, that “If pollution is a cost to you (my competitor) and a cost to me, I win if my costs are lower”. Controlling these costs requires people to think about it ‐ a lot. Everyone must accept ownership for pollution. All the pieces must fit together. Unfortunately, even the most advanced companies are still struggling with these issues. An anonymous survey was sent to some of the top pollution‐reducing companies in the world. Responses to the questionnaire that focused on a wide range of issues often proved surprising to disturbing. Executives in charge sometimes felt they had employee involvement but few of the operational conditions for it to exist. Dow Chemical provides a rare example of being able to connect all the pieces, through its three keys.
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1 May 1999
This article was originally published in
Environmental Management and Health
Research Article|
May 01 1999
Employee involvement, pollution control and pieces to the puzzle Available to Purchase
D. Keith Denton
D. Keith Denton
Professor, Department of Management, Southwest Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri, USA
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7085
Print ISSN: 0956-6163
© MCB UP Limited
1999
Environmental Management and Health (1999) 10 (2): 105–111.
Citation
Denton DK (1999), "Employee involvement, pollution control and pieces to the puzzle". Environmental Management and Health, Vol. 10 No. 2 pp. 105–111, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/09566169910259769
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