🚗 Vehicle & Driving Safety
Topic: Backing accidents, seat belts, distracted driving, speed limits, pedestrian safety, load securement, pre-trip inspections, construction zones, and fatigue Duration: 7–10 minutes Required: OSHA 29 CFR 1926.601 (Motor Vehicles), 1926.602 (Equipment), DOT regulations for commercial vehicles
The Stats
- Backing accidents are the #1 vehicle-related incident on construction sites — an estimated 1 in 4 vehicle collisions involve backing
- Fatalities — Motor vehicle crashes are a leading cause of death in construction; many are preventable with seat belts
- Pedestrian strikes — Workers on foot are hit by vehicles every year; speed and visibility are key factors
- Distracted driving — Cell phone use while driving increases crash risk by roughly 4x
- Fatigue — Drowsy driving contributes to an estimated 100,000+ crashes annually in the U.S.
OSHA requires: Seat belts in vehicles; vehicles equipped with horns, mirrors, and backup alarms where applicable; workers trained on site vehicle hazards.
Backing — The #1 Hazard
Before Backing
- Walk the path — Check behind and around the vehicle first
- Use a spotter — When available; maintain eye contact; agree on hand signals
- Sound the horn — Before moving
- Go slow — Creep in reverse; be ready to stop
When Backing
- Mirrors — Use all mirrors; look over shoulder
- No blind backing — If you can't see, get out and look
- Stop if unsure — Never guess; verify path is clear
Spotter Rules
- Spotter must be visible to driver at all times
- Use clear hand signals (stop, go left, go right, slow)
- Driver stops immediately if contact is lost
Seat Belts
- Always buckle up — Before putting vehicle in gear
- All passengers — Everyone buckled, every trip
- Short trips count — Most crashes happen within 25 miles of home
- No exceptions — Moving vehicles require seat belts
Distracted Driving
| Don't | Do |
|---|---|
| Use phone (call, text, scroll) | Pull over to a safe spot if you must use the phone |
| Eat or drink while driving | Park to eat or drink |
| Adjust GPS or radio while moving | Set destination and music before driving |
| Reach for items in the cab | Pull over to retrieve items |
Hands-free is not risk-free — Talking on the phone, even hands-free, still diverts attention.
Speed Limits on Site
- Follow posted limits — Typically 10–15 mph on site
- Pedestrian areas — Slow down near workers on foot
- Dust and mud — Reduce speed; visibility and traction are limited
- Parking areas — Watch for vehicles and people backing out
Pedestrian Safety
Drivers
- Assume pedestrians don't see you — Yield to foot traffic
- Make eye contact — Before proceeding near pedestrians
- Honk when needed — Only to warn, not to rush
- High-visibility zones — Extra caution in congested areas
Pedestrians
- Stay visible — High-vis vest; avoid blind spots
- Don't assume — Make eye contact with drivers before crossing
- Never walk behind — Moving or idling vehicles
- Designated paths — Use pedestrian routes when available
Load Securement
- Inspect — Straps, chains, tie-downs before driving
- Secure — Load must not shift, tip, or fall
- Tarp — Cover loose materials (gravel, dirt) when required
- Re-check — After first few miles; adjust if needed
Pre-Trip Inspection
Before each shift: tires (inflation, tread), lights, mirrors, horn, brakes, fluids, load securement. If anything fails — do not drive. Report and repair.
Driving in Construction Zones
- Reduce speed — Obey reduced limits
- Increase following distance — More space to react
- Stay alert — Workers, equipment, lane changes
- Merge early — Don't wait until the last moment
- No phone — Distraction is especially dangerous in work zones
Fatigue
- Sleep — 7–8 hours before driving
- Signs — Yawning, drifting, missed exits = pull over
- Break — Every 2 hours or 100 miles on long trips
- Report — If too tired to drive safely, say so — no penalty
Discussion Questions
- Who will spot when we're backing today? What are our hand signals?
- What's our site speed limit? Where are the high-pedestrian areas?
- Has everyone completed a pre-trip inspection? Any issues to report?
- Are we carrying a load? Is it properly secured?
Today's Commitment
"I will always use a spotter when backing, buckle up before moving, stay off my phone while driving, and complete a pre-trip inspection every day."
Sign-In
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|---|---|---|
Presenter: _________________ Date: _________