⚠ This one matters most
Safety Tips
Nothing ends a career faster than getting hurt. Fresh tips added weekly — read them, remember them, pass them along to your crew.
Week #1 — Fall Protection
Falls Are Killing Us.
Let's Talk About It.
In 2023, falls killed 421 construction workers in the United States. That's more than one per day. Every single one of those deaths was preventable.
Construction had more fatalities than any other industry in 2023 — 1,075 total. And falls were the number one cause, accounting for nearly 40% of every death on a job site. Most of those fatal falls happened from heights between just 6 and 30 feet. Not skyscrapers. Not cranes. Ladders. Rooftops. Scaffolding. The stuff we work on every single day.
Here's the part that should stop you cold: OSHA says the majority of these deaths could have been prevented with proper fall protection. That means the right equipment existed. The knowledge existed. People just didn't use it — or weren't required to.
I've been on job sites for decades. I've seen guys take shortcuts at height because they were in a hurry, because it was uncomfortable, because nobody was watching. And I've seen what happens when those shortcuts go wrong. No job is worth your life. Not one.
The BizzL's Fall Protection Rules
What You Need to Do Every Single Time
Three Points of Contact on Every Ladder
Two hands and one foot, or two feet and one hand — always. Never carry tools in your hands while climbing. Use a tool belt or hoist your equipment separately. Ladders accounted for 109 fatal falls in 2023 alone.
Harness Up When You're 6 Feet or Higher
OSHA requires fall protection at 6 feet in construction. That's not a suggestion — that's the law. A properly fitted harness connected to a solid anchor point is the difference between a close call and a funeral.
Inspect Your Equipment Before Every Use
Check your harness for fraying, damaged buckles, and worn stitching. Check your lanyard. Check your anchor point. A harness that's been in a fall or left in the sun for years is not the same harness it once was. If it looks questionable — replace it.
Cover or Guard Every Opening
Floor openings, skylights, holes — if it's not covered and secured, it's a hazard. Mark it. Guard it. Cover it. Don't assume someone else will deal with it. You see it, you own it.
Say Something When You See Someone at Risk
If you see a coworker working at height without protection — say something. It might be awkward for 30 seconds. It might save their life.
The Non-Negotiables
Fundamentals That Never Change
Trends come and go. Materials change. Techniques evolve. But some safety principles are permanent — and ignoring them is how good workers end up hurt or worse.
PPE — Wear It, Every Time
Hard hat. Safety glasses. Steel-toed boots. Gloves when needed. High-vis vest when required. Your PPE isn't optional — it's the last line of defense when everything else goes wrong.
Know Your Surroundings
Before you start any task, take 30 seconds to assess what's around you. Know where the exits are. Know what's overhead. Know what equipment is moving nearby. This habit alone prevents a huge number of accidents.
Respect Electricity — Always
If you're not the electrician, don't touch the wiring. Ever. Even if you think it's off. Electricity doesn't give you a second chance to learn from your mistake.
Falls Kill — Don't Rush at Height
Falls are the number one cause of death in construction. Secure your ladders. Use fall protection when required. Three points of contact on ladders — always.
Use Tools for Their Purpose
A screwdriver is not a pry bar. A ladder is not a scaffold. Using tools in ways they weren't designed for is a primary cause of job-site injuries.
Speak Up When Something Is Wrong
If you see something unsafe, say something. Every time. The job site culture that discourages speaking up about safety is a job site where people get hurt.
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Fall Protection — 421 Workers Died in 2023
Falls are the #1 killer in construction. Three points of contact on ladders, harness up at 6 feet, inspect your equipment before every use, guard every opening, and speak up when you see someone at risk.
Posted February 2026