Episode Summary
Josh Vitale — co-founder of Project Built, chair of Construction Suicide Prevention Week, and a self-described recovering superintendent — joins Angelo to dismantle the comfortable lie that awareness alone is solving construction's mental health crisis. They get into the data we don't quote, the family disconnection thread that runs through every superintendent he's ever met, the CEO whose strategy was to wait the obstructionists out, and the cocaine-mice study that explains why our job sites are breaking people. If you lead anyone in construction, this conversation is the one to share.
Topics Covered
• Why Josh refused to lead the way the linemen who hazed him led
• The mask: outside success and inside collapse in your twenties
• The construction mental health stats every leader should know cold
• The EAP call that started Josh's second journey
• Becoming "the suicide guy" and the hero complex he had to unlearn
• Why awareness alone is the on-ramp, not the destination
• The 18.3x suicide multiplier for men in financial difficulty
• Family disconnection as the universal thread across thousands of supers
• The CEO who said "wait for them to retire"
• What to actually say to old-school holdouts
• Listening as leadership — and the Jim Allison story
• Programs that work: Proactive Communication and Frontliners
• Mechanical solutions vs. human solutions on a slipping schedule
• The cocaine mice and the case for environment-as-intervention
• Where to start the inner work: self-awareness, journaling, breath work, nature
• Josh's three-word message to every CEO, CFO, and super listening
Guest Bio
Josh Vitale is the co-founder of Project Built, a non-profit confronting addiction, suicide, burnout, and disconnection in construction. He chairs Construction Suicide Prevention Week, the industry's largest annual awareness initiative, engaging hundreds of thousands of participants every year. A former IBEW/NECA high voltage journeyman lineman turned superintendent, Josh helped build Tough Enough to Talk into one of the most recognized mental health programs in commercial construction, and successfully lobbied to include construction workers in the Arizona State Suicide Prevention Plan. He has been open about his own PTSD, suicidal ideation, and recovery.