Independent job-search site. Not affiliated with the U.S. government. Applications happen on the official USAJOBS.gov. Learn more
Home/Jobs/Safety & Occupational Health Manager
Announcement #875978000

Safety & Occupational Health Manager

Headquarters, NASA · Huntsville, Alabama (+10 more locations)
InternalTelework eligible

What you'd do

The Institutional Safety Program Coordinator supports the Institutional Safety Management Office and provides institutional safety program expertise across the Agency. This position is responsible for increasing awareness of the multi-employer worksite doctrine and executing studies and analyses to identify trends, correlations, behaviors and process improvements to drive changes in safety and health policy, processes, risk mitigation strategies and collaborative work initiatives.

Major duties

Provide institutional safety program guidance and oversight to Centers, Enterprise Organizations and Programs across the Agency; including commercial partners and Federal tenants. Design and execute studies and analyses of multi-variable data sets to identify trends, correlations, behaviors and process improvements that are otherwise hidden. Make observations and recommendations to senior managers to drive changes in safety and health policy, processes, risk mitigation strategies and collaborative work initiatives. Utilize an understanding of industrial operations, facilities, utilities and infrastructure to make assessment of personnel exposures to hazards in varying operational settings and varying working conditions. Supporting an Agency strategy to increase awareness and understanding of the multi-employer worksite doctrine within NASA’s internal corporate environment and in relationships with commercial partners operating on federal property. Support inter-related programs, tasks and initiatives of the Occupational Safety, Industrial/Infrastructure Safety and Process Safety program areas. Participate in the development of new tools and processes designed to help improve the Institutional Safety Program.

What you need to qualify

Specialized experience is experience that has equipped you with the particular ability, skill, and knowledge to successfully perform the duties of this position and is typically in or related to this line of work. To qualify for GS-14, you must have one year of directly related specialized experience equivalent to the GS-13 level: Performing data analysis on parameters relating to the operation of industrial facilities to identify efficiencies, trends and outliers; Identification of operational hazards and employee exposures for industrial, maintenance and construction type activities; and Serving as an approval or regulatory expert or authority for industrial processes occurring at a NASA Center or mission-related commercial/industrial partner Your resume must include a clear and detailed narrative description, in your own words, of how you meet the required specialized experience. Experience statements copied from a position description, vacancy announcement or other reference material constitutes plagiarism and may result in disqualification and losing consideration for the job. NASA prohibits the use of artificial intelligence (AI) or AI-assisted tool in drafting application and assessment responses. Please visit https://www.nasa.gov/careers/how-to-apply/#Artificial-Intelligence to review NASA's guidance on the use of AI tools during the application process.

Before you apply

Federal applications are different: your resume should be 3–5 pages and mirror the language of this announcement. Read our federal resume guide first — it's the #1 reason qualified people get screened out.

Don't miss the next one.

Get an email the moment a similar federal job opens — postings can close in as little as 5 days.

Free forever. One click to unsubscribe.