top of page
Building Safer Workplaces Together
Resources
Practical guides, industry insights, and expert takes to strengthen your safety culture.


Mental Health in Construction: The Hazard Nobody Talks About
Construction workers die by suicide at a rate higher than any other industry. Higher than falls. Higher than the Fatal Four combined. Here's why mental health is a jobsite safety issue and what it actually takes to address it.
8 hours ago3 min read


OSHA's Top 10 Most Cited Construction Violations in 2024
Fall protection has been OSHA's most cited construction standard for over a decade. Here's the full 2024 top 10 list, why these violations keep showing up, and what they actually mean for your site.
Jun 193 min read


Heat Illness Prevention: What Most Construction Sites Still Get Wrong
Heat is the leading weather-related killer of workers in the United States. Most sites have water and shade. Most sites still get it wrong. Here's what the data says about heat illness on construction sites and what an effective prevention program actually looks like.
Jun 134 min read


Why Small Contractors Get Hurt the Most (And What to Do About It)
Firms with fewer than 10 workers account for 57% of all fatal construction injuries. No dedicated safety staff, limited training, and pressure to move fast create a dangerous combination. Here's why small contractors are most at risk and what they can actually do about it.
Jun 103 min read


The Real Cost of a Recordable: What One Workplace Injury Actually Costs Your Business
The average medically consulted injury costs $40,000 in direct costs alone. Factor in indirect costs and the number can hit $320,000. Here's what a recordable actually does to your business — and why sharing these numbers with your crew changes the conversation.
Jun 53 min read


The Fatal Four: Why the Same Four Hazards Keep Killing Construction Workers
Falls, struck-by incidents, electrocutions, and caught-in/between accidents account for 65% of all construction fatalities. We've known about these hazards for decades. Workers are still dying from them every week. Here's why the Fatal Four keep winning and what actually has to change.
Jun 24 min read
bottom of page