It started with a phone call. There had been a fatality on one of Midland Construction’s job sites. A routine workday became a turning point. The job shut down, crews were sent home, and the ripple effect began.
Within eight hours, OSHA launched an investigation. The insurance carrier showed up on-site. The company’s lawyers were called with questions and concerns. And, surprisingly to some, Midland’s accountant became a source of reassurance and support amid the chaos.
In the construction industry, safety isn’t just a moral imperative, it’s a covenant with every person who steps onto a job site, and with every family who expects them to return home.
It’s also deeply tied to a company’s financial health, but when tragedy strikes, the impact reaches far beyond compliance and cost. The emotional toll on team members is profound. Shock, fear, and grief can fracture morale and trust. Public scrutiny, especially over social platforms, adds another layer of pressure, placing the company under a microscope at the very moment its people are hurting the most.
When a serious incident occurs, surety agents reassess the risk and may reduce or suspend bonding capacity. A company’s ability to pursue future work can be compromised overnight. Insurance premiums, especially workers’ compensation, begin to rise sharply and may impact rates for up to three years. The company’s EMR (Experience Modification Rate) increases, which not only affects insurance costs but also can disqualify them from bidding on many competitive jobs.
This is where your accountant can serve as a source of support, not just as a number cruncher but as a strategic advisor. Midland’s CPAs worked side by side with the leadership team to model the financial impact of increased premiums, potential legal liabilities, and delayed projects. They prepared revised work-in-progress (WIP) schedules and cash flow forecasts to reassure bonding companies.
The experience underscored a vital but often overlooked reality: a contractor’s financial story and safety culture are inseparable.
Bonding agents and insurers are not just looking at spreadsheets; they’re reading between the lines. A fatality may indicate gaps in safety procedures and protocols that shape operational risk, and that risk impacts how much trust (and coverage) a company can maintain.
The experience became a painful but powerful lesson: your safety culture is your brand. It’s your identity. Safety is the foundation of a contractor’s reputation, financial strength, and ability to grow.
It shows up in how your crew feels about coming to work, how leaders respond in a crisis, and how you carry the weight of responsibility, not just for profit, but for your people.
This story is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to real persons, company, or actual events is purely coincidental.