How to Ensure Your Safety Training is Defensible – Morally and Legally​

Zachary Fernandez1Life News

How to Ensure Your Safety Training is Defensible – Morally and Legally

Most contractors genuinely care about their people. They want workers to go home safe. They want good jobs, strong crews, and a professional business they’re proud of.  Safety isn’t something they do because they have to—it’s part of doing things right.

That intent matters. When it’s supported by the right training approach, it produces safer work, better crews, and stronger companies.

What’s helpful to understand is where safety training actually works—and where it quietly breaks down.

Why Training Problems Are Rarely About Workers

Only about 15% of a company’s problems are within the direct control of individual workers. Roughly 85% are driven by how work is set up, trained, reinforced, and supervised. Training is no exception.

When something goes wrong, it’s rarely because workers didn’t care. More often, it’s because:

  • Expectations weren’t clear
  • Training wasn’t practical
  • Language or learning needs weren’t considered
  • The trainer lacked real experience
  • There was no follow-up in the field

Understanding this shifts the conversation from blame to building better training.

The Foundation of Effective Safety Training

Strong safety training is not complicated, but it does need to be deliberate. Most contractors already have pieces of this in place—this is about tightening the system so it works consistently.

Clear Standards to Train From: Training needs a solid starting point:

  • A defined training program, or
  • A written Safe Work Procedure / SOP that clearly describes how the work is done

This creates consistency across crews and sites and removes guesswork for supervisors. Without a clear standard, training becomes informal and inconsistent—even when intentions are good.

Training Delivered So Workers Can Actually Understand It

Training only works if it lands. That means accounting for:

  • English as a second language
  • Different learning styles
  • Literacy levels
  • The realities of the jobsite

Thinking is not learning. Doing is learning. Competency lives in both the brain and the body. Workers need to see it, talk about it, and physically do it—not just hear about it. This is why hands-on demonstration and practice are essential, especially for higher-risk tasks.

Practice and Retention Matter More Than Exposure. Many training programs rely heavily on passive methods:

  • Lectures
  • Videos
  • Reading and sign-offs

The challenge is retention.

People retain far more when they discuss, practice, and apply what they’ve learned. Hands-on practice under supervision is what builds habits that hold up under pressure.

Competency Requires a Competent Trainer. A competent person is not simply someone who is available. Competency means having:

  • The knowledge
  • The experience
  • The ability to recognize hazards and correct unsafe actions

This is why supervisors are often the most effective trainers. They understand how the work is really done, where shortcuts creep in, and what can go wrong when conditions change.

A Card Is Not the Same as Competency

“I’ve got my card—I’m good for three years.”

Certification has value, but competency is demonstrated through application, not possession of a card.

Why This Matters for the Business – Training that actually works:

  • Reduces incidents
  • Improves quality
  • Prevents rework and delays
  • Strengthens supervision
  • Lowers insurance exposure

The Risk Owners Need to Clearly Understand

If a serious incident occurs, the first thing investigators will ask for is training records—dates, content, trainer competency, delivery method, and whether the worker could reasonably apply the training.

The higher the risk, the higher the expectation.

A lack of proper training can take a life—and it can also take down a company through fines, legal exposure, insurance fallout, or lost work.

Strong training systems protect people first, and they protect the future of the business.

Zachary Fernandez