(LSE) FINAL EXAM PREP: 200 Q&A WITH
FULL RATIONALES (2024-2025 EDITION)
Leadership in Safety Excellence (LSE) Practice Exam
1. What is the primary goal of the "Leadership in Safety
Excellence" program?
A) To memorize provincial legislation
B) To provide supervisors with the tools to integrate
safety into daily management
C) To learn how to issue the most fines to workers
D) To replace the need for a safety officer
Rationale: LSE focuses on empowering frontline leadership to
take ownership of the safety culture.
2. According to the Internal Responsibility System (IRS),
who is responsible for safety?
A) Only the Safety Coordinator
B) Only the Business Owner
C) Everyone in the workplace, proportionate to their
authority
D) Only the workers on the tools
Rationale: The IRS philosophy dictates that everyone is
responsible for safety based on their level of control over the
work.
3. "Due Diligence" is best defined as:
A) Following the law only when an inspector is present
B) Taking every reasonable precaution in the
circumstances to prevent an injury
C) Having a signed safety manual in the office
D) Paying for the best insurance policy available
Rationale: Due diligence is a legal defense showing that a leader
was proactive and did everything "reasonable" to protect
workers.
,4. Which of the following is one of the three basic "Worker
Rights"?
A) The right to a promotion
B) The right to refuse unsafe work
C) The right to work without PPE
D) The right to choose their own supervisor
Rationale: The three rights are: The right to know, the right to
participate, and the right to refuse unsafe work.
5. A supervisor’s "Legal Liability" primarily stems from:
A) Worker's Compensation boards
B) Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Legislation and
the Criminal Code
C) The company’s human resources policy
D) Public opinion
Rationale: Supervisors can face fines or imprisonment under
OHS laws and Bill C-45 (Westray Law) for criminal negligence.
6. What is the first step in the "Hazard Management"
process?
A) Controlling the hazard
B) Identifying the hazard
C) Writing a report
D) Buying new equipment
Rationale: You cannot assess or control a danger that you haven't
first identified.
7. In the "Hierarchy of Controls," which is the most
effective method?
A) PPE (Personal Protective Equipment)
B) Administrative Controls
C) Engineering Controls
D) Elimination
Rationale: Removing the hazard entirely is always more effective
than trying to guard against it or wear protection.
8. A "Job Safety Analysis" (JSA) is typically performed:
A) Once a year for the whole company
B) Before a specific task begins to break it down into steps
C) Only after an accident has occurred
D) By the CEO of the company
, Rationale: JSAs are task-specific tools used to identify hazards in
a specific sequence of work.
9. What is the difference between an "Incident" and an
"Accident"?
A) There is no difference
B) An accident involves a death; an incident does not
C) An incident is an unplanned event that could result in
injury; an accident does result in injury/loss
D) Accidents are always intentional
Rationale: "Incident" is a broader term that includes "near
misses" where no harm occurred but the potential was there.
10. The main purpose of a "Workplace Inspection" is to:
A) Find someone to blame for a mess
B) Identify substandard conditions and practices before
they cause an injury
C) Prepare for a visit from a government inspector
D) Clean up the site for a client visit
Rationale: Inspections are proactive tools used to catch hazards
in the physical environment.
11. When a worker refuses work, what is the supervisor’s
first duty?
A) To fire the worker for insubordination
B) To investigate the refusal in the presence of the worker
and a representative
C) To tell another worker to do the job immediately
D) To ignore the refusal and keep working
Rationale: Legally, a refusal triggers a formal investigation
process that must involve the worker.
12.A "Near Miss" should be investigated because:
A) It is required for insurance discounts
B) It provides an opportunity to prevent a future "Real"
accident
C) The supervisor needs to fill out more paperwork
D) To see who was almost hurt
Rationale: A near miss is a "free warning"—the same causes that
led to the near miss will eventually lead to an injury.
13.What are "Administrative Controls"?
A) Installing a physical guard on a saw
, B) Implementing signs, training, and job rotation to
reduce exposure
C) Wearing safety glasses
D) Removing a chemical from the site
Rationale: Administrative controls change the way people work
through rules and procedures.
14."Direct Costs" of an accident (like medical bills) are often
compared to:
A) An airplane
B) An iceberg (the majority of costs are hidden below the
surface)
C) A tree
D) A bank account
Rationale: Indirect costs (lost productivity, training
replacements, damage to reputation) are usually 4-10 times
higher than direct costs.
15. A "Competent Person" is defined as someone who:
A) Has worked for the company for 10 years
B) Is qualified by knowledge, training, and experience to
organize the work
C) Is the oldest person on the crew
D) Has never had an accident
Rationale: Competency is a legal standard based on specific
knowledge of the task and the legislation.
16.What is the "Root Cause" of an accident?
A) The person who tripped
B) The underlying system failure that allowed the incident
to occur
C) The wet floor
D) Bad luck
Rationale: Investigations must go beyond the "immediate cause"
(wet floor) to find why the floor was wet (system failure).
17. Which of the following is a "Leading Indicator" of safety
performance?
A) The number of injuries last year
B) Workers' compensation costs
C) The number of safety meetings held this month
D) The total number of days lost to disability