Remote Medicine and Risk Management Specialist.

Pacific Northwest yetti

Expedition Medic
I have a pretty non-standard resume. And have worked hard enough to be one of a few, who check all the box’s. For a specific position.

It never hurts to see what is out there. I am currently working as a Safety Coordinator for a Nationwide utilities contractor. But am open for the next place to call home for 10 years. Preferably regional, with the ability to work remote. And travel <50% of the time. I am in no rush.

I have worked Professional safety in all OSHA sub categories,

  • General Industry
  • Construction
  • Agriculture
  • Maritime/ and Docks

I am an experienced Safety Coordinator / Risk Manager and Medic. With 10+yrs experience as a firefighter/ AEMT, and Risk Manager. With endorsements in remote and occupational medicine. As well as a multitude of other certifications and experience. Including an industrial health certification. (from Amphibious medics) Extensive knowledge of NFPA, and OSHA codes and regulations. Including an OSHA construction certification (OSHA 30). I also have an OSHA 511 certification. Including an OSHA 501 trainer for General Industry. Spent two years working for Icicle Seafoods, out of Seattle. This role had me operating as the Safety Manager and Medical Provider. This role puts me in remote locations and on ships for 6 months out of the year. Have been trained and certified to administer drug testing for the coast guard and DOT. Including SCP, Ship Competent Person, (high risk confined space work aboard ships).

I have also set up, designed and successfully implemented Covid-19, testing, screening and isolation procedures for remote and industrial environments. Including fish processing facilities. As well as performing NPA Schwab tests for employees, and sending them out for laboratory testing.
I spent the 2021 year managing the deployment teams for Adventure Medics, out of Bend Oregon. Working with FEMA and the USFS for mass vaccine sites, as well as fires. Leading teams of cross cultural, governmental and licensure level. Including setting up mobile medical bases for wildland fires. As well as in house safety and workers comp.

I have experience driving trucks, equipment, tractors, semis, large truck and trailer combinations. I also love to travel; I have a clean passport. Having traveled through Mexico, Columbia, Chile, Argentina and Patagonia. The trip through Patagonia was Via motorcycle, November of 2018.

I also Volunteer for my local Fire Dept. (Umatilla County Fire District 1, as a firefighter/ AEMT) and a disaster relief nonprofit, Team Rubicon, for domestic and international medical and disaster relief work.
I spent 7 years with DuPont Pioneer, doing training and public speaking to 30-160-person groups. Managing the health, safety and environment for the location. Tracking training, organizing briefings, ordering and inventory of all the PPE on site. Program implementation, STOP audit programs, managing location CDL drivers, line walks, and many other activities as needed.

LinkedIn : https://www.linkedin.com/in/jordan-pawley-9971a0180/
 

N.Penley

Member
I am also in the Environmental Health & Safety field but have plans to stay put for the next few years while my kids are in school. I have been focused on Industrial Hygiene although it is not truly my passion.

I know it would be a bit of risk but have you considered starting your own consulting business? Traveling around the country conducting ISO audits etc. sounds like it may be a good fit for you. You could be at a site in person for a week or two and then create reports and review supporting documents from anywhere. All it takes is one nationwide or regional customer. Breaking out on your own will be a huge risk but if you have good relationships with previous collogues you may be surprised how high demand can be.

Utilities, municipalities, collages, and commercial retailers all require consultants and all you need is a foot in the right door. I know of two individuals who have created a comfortable lifestyle doing this. One got an in with a utility company and the other with a regional healthcare provider.

Best of luck:
Nate
 

Pacific Northwest yetti

Expedition Medic
just curious, what would make a passport dirty?
Anything that would flag at a border, mainly it’s a way of saying there has never been an issue before with it, the holder. However, warrants, legal issues, custody stuff, watch list, hold orders would flag it. And probably other things I am unaware of. Sometimes border crossing at a specific location, within certain dates. Usually pertaining to heightened concerns with conflict zones, ,etc

* I should add, current global entry card as well.
 
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plh

Explorer
Anything that would flag at a border, mainly it’s a way of saying there has never been an issue before with it, the holder. However, warrants, legal issues, custody stuff, watch list, hold orders would flag it. And probably other things I am unaware of. Sometimes border crossing at a specific location, within certain dates. Usually pertaining to heightened concerns with conflict zones, ,etc

* I should add, current global entry card as well.

Thanks for that. Hundreds of stamps and visa's in mine over the years and I never thought of this.
 

N.Penley

Member
Consulting and training go hand in hand. As strange as it may sound, someone is (or should be) getting rich driving around doing basic awareness classes and audits for commercial business you deal with daily. McDonalds, Walgreens, Dollar General, Bank of America, Shell, etc. all need people with our background.

You have a leg up on me with your marine industry experience. My wife and I dream of exploring coastal areas by land and water and would love to transition into something like I described near the east or gulf coast. She has an accounting background and does bookkeeping and payroll for 4 small businesses now. We both also have business degrees, so the behind-the-scenes stuff doesn't scare us much.

Go ahead and setup your own consulting business now. Trade a few hours of your time walking through preschools, churches, and small businesses for lunch or something. The references and years of operation/experience all add up. While you are at Bob's Tire Shop offer to exchange your services for a discount. Bob may know a guy that owns 6 carwashes that OSHA or the local fire marshal just visited.
 

Pacific Northwest yetti

Expedition Medic
I do a lot of training as well. Most of the large places, have in house people for it, EHS, SHE, HSE whatever acronym soup is in vogue for safety and health that year. ( DuPont, Honeywell, and a lot are also including the medical side as well. And quite a few I have worked with. Most have in house Audit teams as well. I worked with the in house Audit team with DuPont, and others. Other places like McDonalds, has an in house person but they make < Industry standard. ( according to LinkedIn)

Like Chevron, AWS, Icicle, not to mention construction sites. With someone who also does the onsite medical, the ins and outs of what becomes an OSHA recordable/Vs Reportable. Like Steri Strips vs Sutures which are a recordable. As OSHA considers Steri-Strips first aid. And we are seeing companies like Amphibious Medics, CORE medical. Who provide a tele medicine or on site medical rep. As the workers comp industry is massive in the states. With the occupational medicine segment growing very fast. Some of the Industry’s I have worked with have a Doc on staff, as well as X ray machines. I have used portable ultra sounds in the field/ and “work” environment.

I don’t hurt for work, and have worked hard enough to be picky. There is a market for consulting for sure. In Fact in General, Safety and Health is a large growth area.
My “plan” is after spending the last 5 years freelance I would like to spend 10years maxing out my 401k Again. As well as having insurance. And then “retire” to training and consulting At 44.
But, plans right? I never would have guessed the life I have lived thus far.
 

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