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AGC CONTRACTORS CONTINUE EFFORTS TO URGE MOTORISTS TO SLOW DOWN IN HIGHWAY WORK ZONES

AGC highway construction contractors continue to make highway work zones safer, protecting both the workers and the motorists. “Work zone injuries and deaths are avoidable,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, chief executive officer of The Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) during Work Zone Awareness Week.

Each year, more than 1,000 workers and motorists are killed in work zones and those numbers have been steadily increasing.

“Motorists need to follow the posted speed limits and be alert to changes in lane alignments in the work zone so that road improvements can be made without placing workers or motorists at risk,” added Sandherr.

The theme for this year’s Work Zone Awareness Week is “Signs of Change” and is intended to get motorists to pay closer attention to the orange work zone signs that give them direction when construction is underway. Similar events are being held nationwide during Work Zone Awareness Week.

“The construction industry places a premium on worker safety and we will continue to make it a priority to keep our workers out of harm’s way,” said AGC member Brian Burgett (Kokosing Construction Co., Frederickstown, Ohio) who spoke during an event at the Woodrow Wilson Bridge reconstruction project, part of the Capitol beltway just south of Washington, D.C. “As a contractor, my goal is to protect employees from all unnecessary hazards; but the facts remain that there is one work zone fatality every 8.2 hours or three per day.”

Kokosing Construction Co. was also named AGC’s Grand Safety Award Winner at AGC’s 88th Annual Convention in San Antonio in March. Over the last four years Kokosing’s management and employees have made substantial improvements in their safety program. The team focused on core safety processes, which helped their incident rate drop from 8.98 percent in 2003 to 3.32 percent in 2006.

AGC worked to have provisions included in the 2005 federal transportation legislation to increase police presence in work zones and allow for increased use of additional safety items, including concrete barrier.



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  Did You Know?
 

Compared To Other Industries, Construction Tends To Be More Dangerous.

The rate of injury for workers in the construction industry is approximately 60 percent higher than the overall average for all workers.  Recognizing that hazards exist and planning ahead to properly control or eliminate them, helps protect the working men and women of the construction industry and saves businesses time and money.

Construction has the third highest rate of death by injury.

The death rate in the construction industry is about 15.2 deaths per 100,000 workers.  The leading causes of death among construction workers are falls from elevation, motor vehicle crashes, electrocution, machines, and stuck by falling objects.  The only two industries that have a higher death rate include mining and agriculture.


 


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