For decades, construction companies have relied on compliance checklists, monthly audits, and regulatory mandates to keep workers safe on the job. Yet many firms that pass every inspection still face rising incident rates. The missing piece is not stricter rules but a genuine safety culture that embeds safe practices into every level of the organization. When contractors shift from compliance-driven safety to values-driven safety, they create workplaces where employees take ownership of their own wellbeing and that of their coworkers. This article examines how leading contractors are moving beyond what safety expert Don Swasing calls “compliance rituals” to build cultures that truly protect their people. For a broader perspective on systematic safety approaches, see our article on Highway Safety Road Safety Audits Crash Analysis Countermeasure.
Beyond Compliance: What Sets a True Safety Culture Apart
Safety compliance and safety culture are not the same thing. Compliance means following rules. Culture means internalizing values. The distinction matters because a compliance-only approach creates what experts call “compliance rituals”: activities that check boxes without changing behavior on the ground.
The Difference Between Safety Values and Safety Priorities
Kris Manning, national director of safety and vice president with Clark Construction Group, draws a sharp line between priorities and values. “We do not view safety as a priority. Safety is a core value to us. Priorities often change. A core value, on the other hand, represents the foundation of who you are and what you do.” This distinction is critical. When safety is a priority, it can be displaced by schedule pressure, budget constraints, or production targets. When safety is a core value, it cannot be traded off. It informs every decision from the boardroom to the trench.
Why Compliance Rituals Fail to Prevent Incidents
Don Swasing, chief operating officer for Schlouch Inc., a Pennsylvania-based site preparation company, describes what happened at his firm before its cultural transformation. “We had a loss control person who went out into the field nine times a year to conduct audits. He would look at equipment logs, seatbelt on/off, backup alarms, housekeeping of trailers. Everything looked great. We were focused on the wrong things, which we got right every time, but we missed the employee engagement piece completely.” Despite passing every audit, the company incident rate kept climbing. The audit had become a ritual unconnected to real safety outcomes. Swasing explains that a safety culture is about “measuring the presence of safety, not the absence of accidents.” It reflects “the attitudes, beliefs, perceptions and values employees share as they relate to safety.” For more on integrating safety into daily operations, read about Construction Safety Principles of Hazard Identification Risk Assessment.
Leadership Commitment as the Foundation of Safety Transformation
Every successful safety culture transformation begins with leadership. Without visible, consistent commitment from the top, cultural change efforts stall. Leaders must be willing to examine uncomfortable truths about their current state and communicate openly about what needs to change.
Assessing the Current State Honestly
Schlouch began its transformation in 2014 after experiencing a series of rollover accidents. Leadership assigned key employees to investigate root causes. The findings were revealing. “It could have been easy to make excuses for our rollovers, such as the operator was inexperienced or the underfoot condition was poor,” Swasing says. “But at the end of the day, a lot of our problems had to do with unsafe acts and putting employees and machines into challenging situations.” The willingness to face these facts without deflection was the first step toward meaningful change.
This honest assessment requires courage because it exposes problems that leadership may prefer to ignore. Swasing notes: “You have to be strong because there is a risk in being honest about your current state. A lot of CEOs do not want to hear that things are messed up. It is important to give the CEO confidence that you are going to fix it. Trust is a critical component in cultural change.”
Walk the Talk: Being Present on the Jobsite
Establishing trust requires leaders to be visible and engaged. Safety leaders must be credible, respected, and inspirational. Swasing explains: “If they are trying to inspire change, they need to walk the talk every day. At Schlouch, we actually created leadership standards together as a team, published those standards, and gave them to everyone in the company.” Leaders who do not embrace change threaten the credibility of the entire safety transformation. In some cases, they may need to be removed from the team for the culture to evolve. For guidance on equipment-specific safety practices, see Construction Equipment Safety Operating Procedures Site Protocols and.
Practical Strategies for Building an Engaged Safety Culture
Moving from compliance to culture requires concrete actions that engage every employee in the safety mission. Below are strategies that leading contractors use to drive engagement and build ownership at all levels.
Celebrating Milestones and Recognizing Good Work
Both Clark Construction and Schlouch emphasize the power of positive reinforcement. Celebrating safety milestones reinforces desired behaviors and builds momentum for cultural change. Recognition methods include:
- Bringing in breakfast or lunch to mark accident-free milestones
- Issuing spot rewards such as televisions or tickets to sporting events
- Sharing photos and stories through company communication channels
- Sending company-wide emails highlighting safety achievements
- Using private social media groups where employees share safety ideas and celebrate successes
Schlouch uses a private Facebook group where approximately 100 employees share photos, stories, and celebrate safety wins. “The front line contributes a tremendous amount of great ideas and examples of what right looks like,” Swasing says. Clark runs a similar program where “stand downs” involving team meals mark important milestones.
The Stop, Talk and Accept Approach
Clark Construction operates a program called Stop, Talk and Accept that empowers every person on the jobsite, regardless of rank or tenure, to address unsafe behavior. Manning explains: “Whether you are a company veteran or it is your first week on the job, you have the authority and responsibility to stop anyone on the jobsite who is doing something unsafe. When it comes to safety, there is no rank.” The approach works because it removes hierarchy from safety decisions. A new hire can stop a senior superintendent. The key is that feedback must be delivered constructively and accepted graciously. This creates a culture where safety is everyone job, not just the safety department job.
Leveraging Leading Indicators and Near Miss Reporting
Leading indicators, which are proactive measures that predict future safety performance, are more valuable than lagging indicators like incident rates. Manning encourages supervisors to ask probing questions: “If something were to go wrong in your area or with your crew, what do you think it would be?” These conversations surface risks before they become incidents. Near miss reporting is equally critical. When employees report close calls without fear of blame, the organization gains valuable data about hidden hazards. Clark shares lessons learned across the organization so that one team near miss becomes every team learning opportunity. For detailed information on regulatory standards and site management, see Construction Safety Compliance Osha Standards Site Management and.
Sustaining the Transformation Long Term
Cultural change does not happen overnight. Both Clark and Schlouch emphasize that patience is essential. Leaders must allow the new approach to settle in and give employees time to adapt before expecting full transformation.
Avoiding the Blame Game
When incidents do occur, the response matters more than the incident itself. Manning stresses the importance of focusing on root causes rather than assigning blame. “Our goal is to identify the root cause and contributing factors, and have an open dialogue. We share lessons learned throughout the organization if we feel like others could learn from it.” He warns against finger pointing: “As soon as you start blaming your employees, the chance of getting their honest feedback goes away. At the end of the day, all of this is rooted in a respect for people.” Swasing echoes this view. During the early stages of transformation, leaders must avoid creating an “undercurrent of fear.” He advises: “You cannot start scaring people and firing people. A company has to allow this new approach to settle in.”
Measuring What Matters
After its transformation, Schlouch changed how it conducted audits. Instead of a single loss control person checking compliance items, senior leaders now audit each other sites. These audits focus on identifying hazards, spotting blind spots, and recognizing what employees are doing right. The results are distributed company-wide.
| Compliance Ritual Approach | Safety Culture Approach |
|---|---|
| Checklist audits by a single inspector | Peer audits by trained senior leaders |
| Focus on paperwork and documentation | Focus on hazards and employee behavior |
| Results reported to management only | Results shared with entire company |
| Penalties for violations | Coaching and mentoring for improvement |
| Safety seen as the safety department job | Safety owned by every employee |
| Reactive: investigate after incidents | Proactive: leading indicators and near misses |
| Compliance as the ceiling | Continuous improvement as the goal |
The shift from compliance ritual to safety culture does not mean abandoning standards. Schlouch still has 13 employees certified as Safety Trained Supervisors in Construction by the Board of Certified Safety Professionals. They audit each other sites for hazards but also look for things employees are doing right and celebrate them. The daily huddle changed too. Instead of a sign-up sheet and a list of standard hazards, now someone greets each worker on arrival, new employees receive tool and jobsite orientation task training, and the huddles are more energetic and interactive.
The bottom line is that a genuine safety culture is built on trust, engagement, and shared values, not on fear, checklists, or compliance rituals. Contractors who make this shift find that their incident rates drop, their employees are more engaged, and their jobsites are genuinely safer places to work. The transformation requires patience and persistence, but the payoff in human and operational terms is substantial.
