Episode 149 features construction safety expert Terry Dussault, who shares practical, field‑tested insights on improving safety performance in construction environments. The conversation focuses on culture, accountability, and the day‑to‑day behaviors that determine whether crews work safely or drift into risk.
Construction safety succeeds when leaders create clarity, consistency, and accountability—not through paperwork, but through visible engagement and real conversations with workers.
Terry emphasizes that construction environments are:
Fast‑moving
Constantly changing
Filled with competing priorities
Dependent on communication between multiple contractors
Because of this, safety systems must be simple, repeatable, and enforced daily.
Terry stresses that:
Workers judge safety by what leaders do, not what they say
Supervisors must be present, observant, and willing to correct hazards immediately
Leaders who avoid conflict create unsafe crews
He frames leadership presence as the single most powerful safety tool on a jobsite.
Terry explains that accountability is not about discipline—it’s about:
Setting clear expectations
Following up consistently
Coaching workers toward safer habits
Reinforcing the “why” behind each rule
He argues that when accountability is missing, workers fill the gap with shortcuts.
Construction safety depends on:
Daily huddles
Clear pre‑task planning
Asking workers to explain their plan
Listening for gaps in understanding
Terry highlights that most incidents stem from assumptions, not lack of training.
Terry outlines several culture‑building practices:
Celebrate safe behaviors publicly
Correct unsafe actions privately
Make safety personal, not procedural
Ensure every worker knows their role in hazard control
He emphasizes that culture is built through thousands of small interactions, not slogans.
Construction safety improves when leaders are visible, consistent, and engaged. Terry Dussault’s message is simple: if leaders show up, ask questions, coach workers, and enforce expectations, crews will follow—and safety performance will rise.