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Things that could kill you: Contractors are turning to new ways to monitor construction site safety
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Things that could kill you: Contractors are turning to new ways to monitor construction site safety

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Mortality rates on construction sites have remained stable for a decade. Industry mantras claim that the only acceptable number of injuries and fatalities is zero, but there has been no reduction in fatalities.

sector Fatal injury rate fixed About 10 deaths per 100,000 full-time workers. To help move the needle, security leaders began looking for new ways to measure success in security. Established, they say current measurements are flawed.

So some leading contractors are now recording and analyzing safety data differently. Instead of trying to eliminate all jobsite injuries, some have turned their focus to the most serious hazards: the things that can kill you.

For example, Paul Levin, Sundt’s senior vice president of health, safety and environment, recognized that even when the contractor successfully met safety goals, existing methods for measuring success in safety were not preventive or accurate enough.

“That’s what most of us in the construction safety field think: You do that compliance stuff, you do those other best practices,” he said. “And it enabled development. But at Sundt, by 2019 and reaching our business goal of a 0.50 recordable injury rate, our total number of incidents was not decreasing.”

Headshot of Paul Levin.

Paul Levin

Permission granted by Sundt

Based on construction industry fatality data and the hours of work to which Sundt was exposed, Levin reasoned that the company could “expect” a death approximately every four years and 61 days. This was unacceptable.

In 2019, Sundt began experimenting with a new metric called STCKY, or “Stuff That Can Kill You.” (Sometimes Levin doesn’t say “thing” but instead uses language more commonly heard on the construction site.)

Last year, Sundt’s Stop STCKY program won the United General Contractors of America award Innovation Award. The program better shows when workers avoid danger through direct controls and protections or through luck; so Sundt can take action to ensure these protections are enforced more frequently.

After measuring the data, Levin said, Sundt professionals conducted “STCKY Walks,” where workers stop working when they encounter hazards with inadequate protection.

Sundt also educated its workforce and trading partners about deadly dangers. The STCKY program emphasizes that: 8 deadly dangers more than three categories:

  • STCKY Success: No serious injury or death occurs when direct controls and protection measures are implemented.
  • STCKY Chance: No serious injuries or deaths, no direct controls and protections available.
  • STCKY Injury: Serious injury or death has occurred.

While compliance with all hazards remains essential regardless of severity, a new focus on the precursors to the deadliest and most dangerous exposures may be a better way to not only measure success but also ensure workers are better protected from hazards. no one gets hurt.

Problems with existing measurements

Construction experts largely agree that current metrics for measuring safety (such as total recordable injury rates) do not reflect how safe a construction site truly is.

“Today, someone can put their hand on a door and that could result in stitches, and that’s a recordable event,” said Phil Clarke, director of safety and risk management for California-based oil and gas contractor KS Industries. The same thing will happen tomorrow and this will cause the finger to bruise.”

In fact, a 2020 study by the Construction Safety Research Alliance, using 17 years of data and 3.2 trillion work hours, invalidated the measurement because it found no discernible relationship between the measurements. Total recordable injury rates and deaths.

TRIR is the rate at which a company encounters one OSHA recordable incident per 200,000 worker hours. A recordable incident is a work-related injury that involves loss of consciousness or requires medical treatment beyond first aid, requiring days away from work, limited work, or transfer to another job.

More deaths in construction than any other industry in 2022

The most recent data available is the number of workplace deaths in the US in 2022.

TRIR is established and institutionalized in accordance with OSHA recordkeeping requirements. TRIR has been used for 50 years to compare industries, companies and projects and is sometimes used as a measure of success, CSRA said. Insurance companies also use TRIR to set workers’ compensation insurance premiums, CSRA said.

Experts say TRIR’s flaw stems from its name: It captures only recordable events, not injury severity and near misses.

“A cut, a broken leg and death are all considered the same,” Levin said.

For example, industry leaders have largely moved away from advocating a specific threshold of injury-free days.