Recorded live at the 2026 VPPPA Region I Annual Conference & Exhibition in Portland, Maine, this special panel episode of Facility Rockstars brings together three leaders from Collins Aerospace’s Windsor Locks facility, Matt Twerdy (EHS), Jeff Houle (Facilities, RTX), and John Mullen (Fuss & O’Neill Manufacturing Solutions), for a compelling, real-world conversation on Human and Organizational Performance (HOP) philosophy. Host Jay Culbert emcees the discussion, which centers on five core HOP principles: people make mistakes, blame fixes nothing, context drives behavior, learning enables improvement, and, perhaps most critically, leadership response matters. The panel uses vivid, unfiltered stories from the plant floor to illustrate how shifting from a blame-and-punish culture to a learning mindset changes everything, from how teams communicate near misses to how contractors show up for conversations they used to avoid.
The conversation goes far beyond theory. Panelists share first-hand experiences, from a fired electrician whose termination exposed a broken system, to a plant-wide blackout at 2 a.m. handled with remarkable calm, to a trenching job that uncovered decades-old underground conduit and called for a tactical pause and new technology. Audience members also share their own turning-point moments, reinforcing the message that psychological safety isn’t a program, it’s a philosophy, and it has to start with the leader in the room. Whether you’re in EHS, facilities, or operations, this episode is a masterclass in how the right response at the right moment can change an entire culture.
Takeaways:
Leadership response is the most powerful culture tool you have. When leaders respond negatively to problems, teams get better at hiding them. When leaders respond with curiosity and calm, teams get better at surfacing them. The tone you set in the first five minutes of a critical conversation echoes for years.
Replace “investigation” with “learning review.” The language you use signals your intent before you say another word. Framing post-incident conversations as learning exercises—not investigations—opens the door to honest, useful information that actually improves your systems.
Understand the gap between “work as imagined” and “work as done.” Plans look clean on paper. Reality in the field is always more complicated. The goal isn’t to eliminate adaptation—it’s to understand it so you can build more resilient systems that help workers fail safely when things go sideways.
Context is everything before you draw a conclusion. Before assuming a rule was broken, ask why. In multiple examples from this episode, workers who appeared to have violated safety protocols had actually done everything they were trained to do. The system failed them—and pausing to get context made all the difference.
Psychological safety isn’t built in a meeting—it’s built in moments. Every time a leader chooses learning over blame, they make it slightly easier for the next person to raise their hand. One audience member described how a single calm response to a lockout-tagout incident became the catalyst that transformed reporting culture at an entire facility.
Apply “tactical pause” instead of “stop work.” The language matters. “Stop work” carries political weight that can shut people down. A tactical pause reframes the moment as collaborative problem-solving—and keeps the team focused on solutions rather than defensiveness.
Invest in contractor relationships before the job starts. When contractors trust that they won’t be blamed for raising issues, they stop hiding problems and start asking for help. Building that relationship upfront—through honest pre-job conversations and quarterly stand-downs—pays off in safer, smoother projects every time.
Quote of the Show:
“There’s a small percentage of the population that will willfully do something wrong. You cannot go into any event thinking the employee did something willful. Flip the script—pretend your absolute best rockstar caused it. It changes your mindset and approach with everything.” — Jeff Houle
Links:
John Mullen
Email: John.MullenJr@collins.com
Jeffrey Houle
Matt Twerdy
VPPPA Region I Website: https://vppregion1.com/


