In 2024, 48 workers across the country lost their lives to heat exposure, and thousands more ended up in the hospital (BLS, 2024).
Half of those fatalities were construction workers (CPWR).
Delaware isn't exempt from that reality. Every May, the state marks Heat Week to get ahead of exactly this, but the risk doesn't end when Heat Week does. It runs through the entire summer, on every shift, on every job site.
Heat illness is almost entirely preventable. But only if employers put the right systems in place before the heat arrives, not after someone's already in trouble.
Here's what a strong heat illness prevention program actually looks like, what OSHA expects to see, and where we most often find the gaps.
Fatal heat illness doesn't happen because a worker forgot to drink water.
It happens because the conditions exceeded what the body could handle, and the right precautions weren't in place in time. That's the part worth sitting with: this is a program failure, not a personal one.
OSHA's General Duty Clause requires a workplace free from recognized hazards likely to cause serious harm, and heat is a recognized hazard. Employers without a real heat illness prevention program, meaning a written plan, acclimatization procedures, hydration access, rest breaks, and emergency protocols, have consistently been found in violation of that duty.
Good to know: OSHA has run a National Heat Emphasis Program since 2022, targeting thousands of inspections at high-risk industries. Delaware employers in construction and agriculture are squarely within that focus.
A strong heat illness prevention program comes down to five components. Here's what each one needs to include.
It doesn't need to be long. It just needs to exist, and your workers need to actually be able to find it. At a minimum, it should cover:
If none of this is written down anywhere, that's the first thing to fix.
This is the most frequently missed element, and it's also the highest-stakes gap. Roughly 50 to 70% of outdoor heat fatalities happen in the first few days someone is working in hot conditions (OSHA/NIOSH). The body simply needs time to adjust.
OSHA's guidance is specific about this:
Post the schedule where crews can see it, and make sure supervisors enforce it. This one practice saves lives.
These sound basic, but each one has a specific requirement worth knowing:
Water: One cup (8 oz.) of cool water every 15 to 20 minutes, on a schedule, not when someone asks for it. By the time a worker feels thirsty, they're already dehydrated.
Rest: Real shade or air conditioning, not a few minutes standing in a truck's shadow. Pop-up canopies, shaded zones near equipment, or a designated cool area all count.
Shade and cooling: Warehouses and poorly ventilated facilities need active cooling, fans, portable AC, or ice stations, not just an open bay door.
Every worker exposed to heat needs to walk away from training able to:
Heat stroke is a 911 situation, full stop: body temperature above 103°F, confusion, rapid pulse, possible loss of consciousness. Workers should never hesitate to call for help.
|
Condition |
Key Symptoms |
Response |
|
Heat Cramps |
Muscle spasms in legs or abdomen |
Stop work, rest, hydrate |
|
Heat Exhaustion |
Heavy sweating, weakness, dizziness, nausea |
Move to cool area, loosen clothing, cool with water, monitor |
|
Heat Stroke |
Temp above 103°F, confusion, hot/dry or damp skin |
Call 911 immediately, cool by any means available |
Before summer really hits, it's worth confirming a few things ahead of time rather than figuring them out in the moment:
Every minute matters in a heat stroke emergency. Planning ahead is what makes the difference when it counts.
Construction: Peak risk hits during the first week of hot weather each season, and during any unexpected heatwave. Heavy equipment, concrete work, and roofing all add radiant heat on top of whatever the thermometer says.
Agriculture: Field workers face direct sun with limited shade during harvest prep. Sussex County's poultry and row-crop operations run heavy seasonal crews right through the hottest stretch of summer, and pesticide application and required PPE add real heat load on top of the sun itself. Scheduling early mornings and rotating crews to covered tasks during peak hours makes a measurable difference.
Landscaping: Crews move through microclimates all day long, sun, shade, vehicle interiors, open pavement, and heat load is genuinely easy to underestimate because it's so inconsistent.
Warehousing: Poor ventilation and heat-generating equipment are drawing more OSHA scrutiny than they used to. Delaware's logistics corridor along I-95 and near the Port of Wilmington keeps warehouse floors busy right through the summer, exactly when this risk peaks. Any facility running above 80°F needs active mitigation in place.
If your heat program is informal, verbal, or doesn't really exist yet, now's the time to fix that. Before July, not during it.
SafeDE consultants can sit down with you and:
All of it at no cost, with no citations and no penalties. Just the guidance to keep your crew safe through the summer.
Get ahead of the heat. Schedule your free consultation at worksafe.delaware.gov/consultation or worksafe.delaware.gov/heat.