Your Current Safety Provider Is Holding Your Budget Hostage
The texture of a rusted padlock is a specific kind of scabrous-a dry, flaky resistance that transfers a metallic tang to the pads of your fingers before the tumblers even think about yielding. It is the feel of a mechanism that has forgotten its purpose through sheer lack of movement.
I felt that grit on my skin this morning after I finished counting the 142 steps from my front door to the mailbox, a ritual that keeps the geography of my world from blurring at the edges. When you spend your days tending a cemetery, as I do, you learn that the things people leave behind are rarely the things they intended to bequeath.
They leave the burden of memory, certainly, but they also leave the silence of unfinished business. In the world of industrial safety and property management, the “unfinished business” is the unwritten manual of the site, a ghost-map that only lives in the mind of the person currently holding the keys.
The Violence of Erasure
Although the quarterly reports might suggest a seamless transition between service providers, the reality of a security switch is usually a violent erasure of institutional memory. I’ve watched it happen on the periphery of my own work. A firm decides that their current fire watch provider is merely mediocre-not catastrophic, but perhaps a
