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Construction Deaths Decline

Engineering News Records recently reported that the number of workplace deaths and the industry's fatality rate declined sharply in 2008 according to the U.S Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics. Construction's 2008 fatality rate, a benchmark that is not affected by the decrease in hours worked, declined to 9.6 per 100,000 full-time-equivalent workers, far below the 29.4 recorded by the agricultural-forestry-fishing-hunting sector.

Industry sources suggest various reasons for the progress, including regulatory efforts by the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Associated Builders and Contractor’s Chairman Craig A. Shaffer cites “an awful lot of voluntary activities” by construction companies to improve jobsite safety. He says such efforts are “good business, from the moral standpoint and from the business-survival standpoint. [Firms with] great safety programs are successful companies, and people want to work there.”

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