Here is a number worth sitting with before your next pre-task planning meeting: according to the Construction Safety Research Alliance, workers in standard pre-task briefings identify only 45% of the hazards they actually face on a given job. That means more than half the risks present on your site at any given moment are going unrecognized before work begins.
That statistic sits at the heart of Construction Safety Week 2026, running May 4–8 under the theme “All In Together.” This year’s initiative — now backed by a formal new alliance between Construction Safety Week and OSHA — is built around three pillars: Recognize, Respond, and Respect. Together, they represent a call to action specifically targeting High Energy, High Hazard work and the serious injuries and fatalities (SIFs) that the industry has failed to eliminate despite years of overall safety progress.
Why SIFs Have Stayed Stubbornly High
Here’s the uncomfortable truth behind the data. Recordable incident rates across the U.S. construction industry have trended downward for years. The industry has gotten meaningfully better at preventing the minor injuries that fill the OSHA 300 log. What it has not gotten better at is preventing the events that kill people.
Fatal construction injuries have remained persistently high for over a decade. According to OSHA, construction accounts for approximately 20% of all U.S. workplace fatalities despite representing roughly 6% of the workforce. Falls, struck-by incidents, caught-in/between accidents, and electrocutions — the “Fatal Four” — continue to account for the majority of those deaths.
The industry’s safety problem is not general sloppiness. It is a specific failure to consistently recognize and control high-energy, high-hazard activities before they escalate. That’s what Construction Safety Week 2026 is designed to address.
The Three Pillars — What They Actually Mean in Practice
Recognize is where the work starts — and where most programs fall short. The Construction Safety Research Alliance’s finding that standard pre-task briefings surface only 45% of actual hazards is not an indictment of worker attention. It is an indictment of the tools being used. When hazard discussions are unstructured, workers default to the hazards they’ve seen before. High-energy hazards — stored energy, gravity, pressure, electrical, chemical — require a systematic framework for identification, not a general conversation.
The Energy Wheel model introduced in this year’s technical bulletin series provides exactly that. By organizing hazard identification around energy types rather than task descriptions, it gives crews a common language and a repeatable process. The research shows that when this kind of structured tool is used, hazard recognition rates improve by 30 percentage points — meaning teams using the Energy Wheel identify roughly 75% of hazards rather than 45%. That gap is where fatalities live.
Respond addresses what happens once a hazard is identified. Recognition without response is just awareness theater. The 2026 framework asks crews and supervisors to treat identified hazards as mandatory stop points — not items to note and proceed past. The new OSHA alliance strengthens this pillar by reinforcing that the right to refuse unsafe work is not a disruption to operations. It is the system working as designed.
Respect is the cultural pillar, and in many ways the hardest to implement. It asks every person on a job site — from the apprentice flagging an unsafe condition to the project executive approving a schedule — to treat the safety of skilled craft workers as a shared and non-negotiable obligation. The five-year plan launched alongside Safety Week 2026 centers this pillar on what the industry calls “deep culture of care”: the belief that respect for the worker is the foundation on which all other safety progress is built.
What the New OSHA Alliance Changes
The formal alliance between Construction Safety Week and OSHA, announced ahead of the 2026 event, is more than symbolic. It means OSHA is officially partnering to co-produce the industry’s largest-ever construction stand-down on May 6, with companies across the U.S. and Canada invited to pause work and recommit to preventing SIFs. It also signals that the frameworks, language, and tools developed through Safety Week — including the STCKY classification system for activities that are “Stuff That Can Kill You” — have regulatory credibility behind them.
For contractors, this matters at renewal time. Carriers are paying closer attention to whether safety programs reflect current best practices. A documented safety culture that uses the STCKY framework, conducts structured energy-wheel briefings, and participates in stand-down events is a different underwriting conversation than one that checks the minimum boxes.
Connecting Safety Culture to Insurance Outcomes
Construction Safety Week is not a compliance exercise. But its outcomes are directly connected to the numbers that drive your insurance costs.
A lower claim frequency — driven by better hazard recognition and faster response to unsafe conditions — is what moves your Experience Modification Rate downward. A documented safety program that reflects the “Recognize, Respond, Respect” framework gives your broker the evidence needed to present your risk favorably to underwriters. And a workforce that operates with genuine respect for safety is less likely to generate the high-severity claims driving umbrella and excess liability increases across the industry.
Your commercial insurance program and your surety bond capacity both improve when your safety culture improves. The Risk Synergy Portal at Tooher-Ferraris helps contractors track the connection between safety performance and program costs — so the work you put into Construction Safety Week has a number attached to it at your next renewal.
Ready to connect your safety culture to your insurance strategy? The team at Tooher-Ferraris has been helping construction businesses build stronger risk programs since 1932. Contact us today to schedule a no-obligation consultation.










































