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Construction Safety Plan Template: OSHA-Compliant Site Safety for Contractors

Construction Safety Plan Template: OSHA-Compliant Site Safety for Contractors

OSHA cited construction employers 77,000 times in 2025, with an average penalty of $4,200 per violation and serious violations reaching $16,550 each. The construction industry accounts for 20% of all US workplace fatalities despite employing just 6% of the workforce.

A written safety plan doesn't just protect your crew — it protects your business. Contractors with documented safety programs pay 14–29% less in workers' compensation premiums, win more commercial bids, and face significantly lower liability exposure when incidents occur.

What OSHA Requires for Construction

Written programs required by OSHA (29 CFR Part 1926):

Program

OSHA Standard

Required When

Hazard Communication

29 CFR 1926.59

Any hazardous chemicals on site

Fall Protection

29 CFR 1926.502

Work at 6 feet or more

Scaffolding safety

29 CFR 1926.451

Any scaffold use

Excavation and trenching

29 CFR 1926.651

Any excavation over 5 feet

PPE

29 CFR 1926.95

Any jobsite

Emergency Action Plan

29 CFR 1926.35

10 or more employees

Lockout/Tagout

29 CFR 1910.147

Work on energized equipment

Fire prevention

29 CFR 1926.150

Any jobsite

The Fatal Four — most-cited construction violations:

1 - 2026-05-26T215119.369

  1. Falls (36% of construction fatalities)
  2. Struck-by object
  3. Electrocution
  4. Caught-in/between

Full Site-Specific Safety Plan Template

SITE-SPECIFIC CONSTRUCTION SAFETY PLAN

Company: ___________________________ Project: ___________________________ Address: ___________________________ Contract Value: $___________________________ Start Date: ___________ Completion: ___________ Plan Date: ___________ Safety Officer / Competent Person: ___________________________ Phone: ___________________________

SECTION 1 — COMPANY SAFETY POLICY

[Company Name] is committed to providing a safe and healthy work environment for all employees, subcontractors, and visitors on every jobsite. No job is so urgent that it cannot be done safely.

Accountability:

SECTION 2 — HAZARD IDENTIFICATION AND ASSESSMENT

Site Conditions Checklist:

  • [ ] Underground utilities located (811 call) — ticket #: _______________
  • [ ] Overhead power lines identified — distance from work: _______________
  • [ ] Asbestos survey: ☐ Completed ☐ Not required — basis: _______________
  • [ ] Lead paint assessment: ☐ Completed ☐ Not required
  • [ ] Site access and egress routes established
  • [ ] Traffic control plan in place (if required)

Work Activity Hazards:

Activity

Hazard

Controls Required

Excavation / trenching

Cave-in, fall

Sloping, shoring, or shielding per OSHA Table B-1

Framing

Fall, struck-by

PFAS, hard hat, toe boards

Roofing

Fall

PFAS or guardrail system

Electrical rough-in

Electrocution

Lockout/tagout, GFCIs, qualified electrician

Concrete

Chemical burns, struck-by

PPE, pump line safety

Demolition

Flying debris, collapse

Engineering review, PPE, exclusion zone

 

SECTION 3 — FALL PROTECTION PLAN

Applies whenever any employee works at 6 feet or more above a lower level.

Fall protection hierarchy:

  1. Elimination — redesign task to remove working at height
  2. Passive protection — guardrails, safety nets
  3. Active protection — personal fall arrest system (PFAS)
  4. Administrative — warning lines, safety monitoring

PFAS Requirements:

  • Full-body harness; inspected before each use
  • Anchorage: 5,000 lbs capacity per worker minimum
  • Max free-fall: 6 feet
  • Self-retracting lifeline (SRL) preferred

Ladder Rules: 4:1 angle. Extend 3 ft above landing. Secure top and bottom. 3-point contact. Never carry materials with both hands.

Site Fall Hazard Log:

Location / Activity

Height

Protection Method

Installed By

Date

Roof work

_____ ft

_________________

_________

_________

Floor openings

N/A

Covers + hole guards

_________

_________

Scaffold work

_____ ft

Guardrail system

_________

_________

 

SECTION 4 — PERSONAL PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT

Minimum PPE — all personnel, all times:

  • [ ] Hard hat (Class E for electrical work)
  • [ ] Safety glasses or goggles
  • [ ] Hi-vis vest (near vehicle traffic)
  • [ ] Steel-toed boots

Task-Specific PPE:

Task

Required PPE

Cutting / grinding

Face shield + safety glasses + hearing protection

Roofing

PFAS, non-slip footwear, gloves

Concrete

Chemical-resistant gloves, knee pads, eye protection

Demolition

Hard hat, face shield, N95, gloves

Electrical

Insulated gloves, safety glasses, no loose clothing

 

SECTION 5 — EXCAVATION AND TRENCHING

Competent person required for any excavation. Trenches over 20 feet require PE-designed system.

Competent Person: ___________________________ Soil Classification Method: ☐ Visual ☐ Manual ☐ Both

Soil Type

Description

Max Slope

Type A (most stable)

Hard clay, cemented

¾:1

Type B

Medium-hard, fissured

1:1

Type C (least stable)

Sandy, gravelly, submerged

1½:1

Pre-excavation checklist: 811 call ☐ | Soil classified ☐ | Protective system installed ☐ | Spoil pile 2 ft back ☐ | Egress every 25 ft ☐ | Daily inspection before entry ☐

SECTION 6 — ELECTRICAL SAFETY

  • All temporary wiring: GFCI protection required
  • Extension cords: 3-wire grounded; inspected before use
  • Minimum approach — overhead power lines: 10 feet (under 50kV)
  • Lockout/tagout required for all energized equipment work

Lockout/Tagout Steps: Notify → identify energy sources → shut down → isolate → apply devices → release stored energy → verify isolation → begin work

SECTION 7 — FIRE PREVENTION AND EMERGENCY RESPONSE

  • 2A:10B:C extinguisher per 3,000 sq ft; max 100 ft travel distance
  • Hot work permit required for welding, cutting, torch-applied roofing

Emergency Contacts:

Service

Number

Emergency

911

Poison control

1-800-222-1222

OSHA (fatality/catastrophe)

1-800-321-OSHA

Safety officer

_________________________

Assembly point: ___________________________ Evacuation signal: ___________________________

On emergency: Evacuate → account for all workers → call 911 → notify safety officer → preserve scene

SECTION 8 — TOOLBOX TALK LOG

Date

Topic

Presenter

Attendees

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

Recommended topics rotation: Fall protection → Struck-by → Electrical → Ladder safety → Excavation → PPE → Heat illness → HazCom → Hand tools → Housekeeping → Fire prevention → First aid

SECTION 9 — SUBCONTRACTOR SAFETY REQUIREMENTS

Before beginning work, all subs must:

  • [ ] Provide proof of workers' comp insurance
  • [ ] Submit their own safety plan or sign compliance with this one
  • [ ] Attend pre-construction safety orientation
  • [ ] Participate in weekly toolbox talks
  • [ ] Report all incidents to GC superintendent within 24 hours

Subcontractor Acknowledgment:

Company

Trade

Signature

Date

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

 

SECTION 10 — INCIDENT REPORTING

Reporting deadlines:

  • All injuries/near-misses: Document within 24 hours
  • Fatality or 3+ hospitalized: Report to OSHA within 8 hours
  • 1–2 hospitalized, amputation, or eye loss: Report to OSHA within 24 hours

INCIDENT REPORT

Date: ___________ Time: ___________ Location: ___________________________ Type: ☐ Injury ☐ Near-miss ☐ Property damage | Injured person: ___________________________ Description: _______________________________________________ Medical treatment: ☐ First aid ☐ Clinic ☐ ER ☐ Hospitalization

Root cause: _______________________________________________ Corrective actions:

Action

Responsible

Due

Done

_________________

_________

_________

 

SECTION 11 — ACKNOWLEDGMENT SIGNATURES

I have received, read, and understand this safety plan and agree to comply.

Name (print)

Signature

Company

Date

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

_________________

_________________

_________________

_________

 

The Cost of Not Having a Safety Plan

[SVG chart: OSHA serious violation $16,550 | OSHA willful/repeat $165,514 max | Lost-time injury avg $38,000 | Workers' comp increase after 1 claim $22,000/yr | Project delay per day $5,000 | Fatal accident litigation $1M+ | WC savings with safety program 14–29% reduction]

A single lost-time injury averages $38,000 in direct costs — with indirect costs (lost productivity, overtime, retraining) multiplying that 4–10x. A documented safety program returns its cost from workers' comp savings alone within 12–18 months.

Safety Plan vs. Safety Program

 

Safety Plan

Safety Program

Scope

Project-specific

Company-wide

Content

Site hazards, personnel, emergency contacts

Hiring, training, equipment inspection, accountability

Updated

Each project

Annually + after incidents

Your company-wide program should include new-hire safety orientation, OSHA 10/30 training requirements, equipment inspection protocols, and a disciplinary policy for violations.

OSHA 10 vs. OSHA 30

Certification

Who

Hours

Content

OSHA 10

All field workers

10 hrs

Basic hazard recognition, Fatal Four

OSHA 30

Foremen, supers, safety officers

30 hrs

Comprehensive OSHA standards

Competent Person

Excavation/scaffold/fall supervisors

Varies

Hazard ID + corrective authority

Not federally required for private work — but most commercial GCs and owners require it.

Safety Plan Maintenance Checklist

1 - 2026-05-26T215127.876

  • [ ] Before each new project — update hazards, personnel, emergency contacts
  • [ ] When new subs join — get acknowledgment signatures
  • [ ] When site conditions change
  • [ ] After any incident — update controls based on root cause
  • [ ] At project closeout — file with project records

Relevant Article:https://blog.tasktag.com/tasktag-vs-companycam-safety-tracker-workflow

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