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Ken Fulginiti is a trial attorney and founder of Fulginiti Law, based in Philadelphia. The opinions are the author’s own.
Every January, construction companies across the country reset their calendars, their budgets and their goals. New projects break ground. New crews come aboard. The new schedules promise efficiency, speed and growth.
However, security rarely takes the same new approach.

Ken Fulginiti
Courtesy of Fulginiti Law
In my work investigating catastrophic construction injuries, I repeatedly hear the same defense after a worker is seriously injured or killed: The site was OSHA compliant. Inspections passed. The boxes were ticked. The documentation was in order.
This logic is not only flawed. It is dangerous.
Occupational Health and Safety Administration The standards were never designed to represent the highest possible level of safety in a workplace. They were designed to establish a baseline. a flat The minimum conditions under which the work can be legally carried out. Treating these standards as a goal misses their purpose and puts lives at risk.
Compliance does not equal protection. OSHA cannot anticipate every site-specific hazard, every shortcut taken under deadline pressure, or every cascading failure that begins with a small oversight and ends in a life-changing injury. Construction sites are dynamic environments. They change daily, sometimes hourly. Real security requires constant reassessment, not static adherence to minimum standards.
The most serious cases I see do not come from a blatant disregard for safety. They stem from a much more subtle and common problem: the assumption that if a site meets OSHA requirements, it must be safe enough. This assumption allows risk to be hidden in plain sight. It allows known hazards to be tolerated because they are outside of a regulatory violation. It allows companies to confuse legality with responsibility.
The start of a new year is the right time to confront this thought.
January can offer something that construction rarely has time for the rest of the year: a break. A moment before the impulse takes over. It’s a great opportunity to ask tough questions about whether security programs are proactive or simply “compliant,” whether training is meaningful or performative, and whether risk is managed or simply documented.
True safety cultures don’t ask, “What does OSHA require?” and stop there They wonder, “What could possibly go wrong here?” They look beyond checklists and consider how real people interact with real teams under real pressures. They invest in planning, oversight, and accountability that go beyond the bare minimum because they understand what’s at stake.
Workers don’t measure safety in citations avoided or inspections passed. They measure it in whether they go home at the end of the day. Their families measure it by whether they hear footsteps at the door that night.
OSHA compliance is important. It is essential. But it was never the ceiling. When we’re pursuing injury litigation, we’re not just looking at whether an OSHA citation was issued, we’re evaluating how an accident could have been avoided. Contractors must put safety above ground and ensure their projects are safe for everyone.
As companies set their priorities for the coming year, the most important resolution they can make is to not only meet OSHA’s minimum standards, but to exceed them. No one wants to be operated on by a surgeon who has the lowest possible passing score on their tables, and no one should want to work on a construction site that meets minimum safety standards.
Let’s start 2026 on the right foot for sure. Instead of setting the bare minimum for workplace safety, let’s think about what we can all do to make sure workers go home at night.
