A positive safety culture means that every person on site genuinely cares about safety and takes personal responsibility for their own actions and those of their colleagues. It goes beyond compliance with rules; it is about shared values, trust, and the belief that every accident is preventable. Building this culture requires consistent effort from everyone, especially those in leadership and supervisory roles.
Key Hazards
Normalised risk-taking when unsafe behaviour goes unchallenged on site
Workers not reporting hazards or near misses due to fear of consequences
Complacency developing on long-duration projects with routine activities
Disconnect between management safety commitments and site-level reality
Control Measures
Lead by example: supervisors must follow the same safety rules they expect from their teams.
Recognise and praise safe behaviour openly to reinforce positive actions across the workforce.
Encourage every operative to intervene constructively when they see unsafe acts or conditions.
Treat near miss reports as valuable safety intelligence, not as a source of blame.
Involve workers in developing risk assessments and method statements for their own tasks.
Hold regular safety conversations with individuals, not just formal toolbox talks.
Respond visibly and promptly to safety concerns raised by the workforce.
Share lessons learned from incidents and near misses across all project teams.
Celebrate safety milestones and recognise teams that demonstrate outstanding safety performance.
Remember
Supervisors must lead by example and follow the same safety rules they expect from others
Recognise and praise safe behaviour openly to encourage it across the whole team
Treat every near miss report as valuable intelligence that helps prevent future incidents
Involve workers in developing risk assessments and method statements for their tasks
Respond visibly and promptly to every safety concern raised by any member of the workforce
Applicable Legislation: Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (Sections 2 and 7) · CDM 2015 · MHSWR 1999 · HSG65 (Managing for Health and Safety)