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Construction Safety Week: What Delaware Builders Need to Know
One worker dies in a construction accident every single day in the United States. In 2024, construction and extraction workers accounted for 1,032 of the 5,070 total fatal work injuries recorded. That is roughly 1 in 5 worker deaths, despite representing only about 5% of the workforce (BLS, 2024).
Construction Safety Week, observed each May, exists to change that, one job site at a time. For Delaware contractors, it's more than an awareness moment. It's a practical opportunity to review what's working, fix what isn't, and recommit to the kind of safety culture that protects your crew and sets your business apart.
The Fatal Four
Four hazards account for the majority of construction fatalities every year. OSHA calls them the Fatal Four:
- Falls: The leading cause of construction deaths, responsible for more than a third of all fatalities. Falls from roofs, ladders, scaffolding, and floor openings remain the most cited OSHA violation for the 14th consecutive year.
- Struck-By: The second leading cause. Workers are struck by vehicles, flying objects, falling tools, and swinging equipment. About 150 struck-by fatalities occur in construction annually.
- Caught-In/Between: Workers caught in machinery, between equipment and a fixed object, or in trench collapses. Excavation cave-ins alone kill dozens of workers each year.
- Electrocution: Contact with energized lines, equipment, or improper temporary wiring. Electrocution risks increase as crews work around infrastructure.
Every one of these is preventable. That's what makes each fatality especially difficult: not just the human cost, but the knowledge that it did not have to happen.
What Construction Safety Week Looks Like on the Job Site
Host a Toolbox Talk on Each Fatal Four Hazard
Dedicate one toolbox talk per day to a specific hazard. Keep it short, around 10 to 15 minutes, and make it conversational. Ask your crew: Where on this site do you feel least safe? What's the one thing you'd change? The answers often surface hazards that management hasn't noticed.
Do a Job Site Walk With Your Crew
Walk the site with workers, not just supervisors. Invite a crew member to lead the walk and identify hazards from their perspective. You'll see things differently.
Review Your Fall Protection Program
Fall protection isn't just about having harnesses on site. Review whether:
- Anchor points are properly rated and positioned
- Workers are trained on harness inspection and donning
- Guardrails are in place at all open edges and floor openings
- Ladders are the right type and set at the correct angle (the 4-to-1 rule: one foot out for every four feet up)
Check Your Struck-By Protocols
- Are hard hat zones clearly marked?
- Do workers know to stay out from under suspended loads?
- Is there a spotter system for heavy equipment operating near workers on foot?
Construction Safety Week and SHARP: Delaware's Competitive Advantage
Delaware is one of only a select number of states participating in OSHA's SHARP Construction Pilot Program, and that is a bigger deal than most contractors realize.
SHARP (Safety and Health Achievement Recognition Program) gives Delaware construction businesses that achieve recognized safety standards:
- A one-year exemption from routine OSHA programmed inspections
- A competitive edge in bidding. SHARP status signals verified safety excellence to general contractors and clients.
- Lower workers' compensation premiums over time
- Federal recognition as a safety leader
The path to SHARP starts with a free SafeDE consultation. Our consultants will walk your site, help you identify gaps, and guide you toward the improvements that lead to recognition. No fines. No citations. Just a roadmap.
Construction Safety Week is the perfect time to start that process.
Industry Stats Delaware Contractors Should Know
- Construction accounts for 1 in 5 worker deaths in the U.S., with 1,032 construction fatalities recorded in 2024. That is roughly 20% of all 5,070 fatal work injuries that year (BLS, 2024)
- In Delaware, construction was responsible for 5 of the 17 workplace fatalities recorded in 2022
- OSHA's top 10 most cited violations list includes 5 construction-specific standards, led by fall protection
- The average cost of a single OSHA construction citation is $16,550 per violation
These numbers are not meant to alarm. They are meant to contextualize why Construction Safety Week matters and why proactive safety investment is simply good business.
Making Safety a Competitive Advantage
The contractors who treat safety as overhead are the ones who lose bids, face higher insurance costs, and deal with turnover from workers who don't feel protected.
The contractors who treat safety as a differentiator, who can point to a track record, a trained crew, and a program that works, are the ones winning in Delaware's construction market.
SafeDE exists to help you get there. Our free, confidential on-site consultations are specifically designed for construction businesses that want to do better and don't know where to start.
Ready to build a safer business? Start with a free consultation: worksafe.delaware.gov/consultation
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