Daily Safety Briefing
Every workday starts with a safety briefing. This is not a formality — it is how we set the tone for the day and remind the crew that getting home safe is the most important thing we do.
Procedure Steps
Follow each step in order. If something does not apply to the current situation, note it and move to the next step. If you find a better way, bring it to your group leader so we can improve the procedure for everyone.
Gather the entire crew at the designated meeting area before any work begins. Everyone attends — no exceptions.
Review the day's work plan: what tasks are happening, where, and who is responsible for each area.
Identify the specific hazards for today's work. Be specific — not just 'be careful,' but 'the trench on the north side is 6 feet deep and requires shoring.'
Check PPE compliance. Look at every person. Ensure hard hats, safety glasses, gloves, and any task-specific PPE are in place.
Ask the crew: 'Does anyone have a safety concern?' Give them time to speak. Listen. Address every concern before work begins.
Review any incidents or near-misses from the previous day. Discuss what happened and what we learned.
Close with a clear statement of the day's priorities. Remind the crew: quality and safety first, speed second.
Document the briefing: date, attendees, topics covered, and any concerns raised. File it before end of day.
Who This Applies To
Related Procedures
Every person who steps onto an Eternity Builders jobsite must complete this orientation. No exceptions. We protect our people because people are more valuable than any project.
When something goes wrong, how we respond defines who we are. This procedure ensures every incident is handled with urgency, transparency, and care for the people involved.
When emergencies happen, preparation saves lives. This procedure ensures every team member knows exactly what to do when seconds matter.
