The A-State Advantage
Steel has a reputation for being dirty and dangerous, but that framing misses the real point. When you’re working around heat, heavy equipment, and molten metal, the job is unforgiving, and that means the difference between a safe shift and a life-changing injury comes down to culture, systems, and leadership that refuses to bend. We sit down with Raymond Tarnow, Director of Safety and Health Services at Big River Steel, to talk about how a modern steelmaker builds safety into the day-to-day. Raymond shares why accountability has to “trickle down” from plant leadership, why safety can’t live in a department or a poster, and what it looks like to lead a team that won’t accept average. He also explains how protecting paychecks and family stability becomes a core part of occupational health when you focus on keeping people healthy and able to work. Then we get into the most unexpected part of the story: Big River Steel’s on-site clinic partnership with Arkansas State University, plus a growing pipeline for nursing students through A-State and ANC. You’ll hear how preventive care and basic vitals checks can catch emergencies early, why nursing students gain rare occupational health experience on the plant floor, and how the “industrial athlete” mindset helps tackle extreme heat stress with hydration, cooling tech, rest, and recovery. If you care about workplace safety, occupational health, leadership, or real industry-university partnerships, subscribe for more conversations like this, share the episode with someone in manufacturing, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
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