Stop Serious Injuries — Focus on HRAs

    Field crews are spotting the risks that kill—and taking action before it’s too late.

    HRA = High-Risk Activities

    A field-ready way to focus on the hazards most likely to kill or seriously injure.

    Repeating Hazards - conveys high-risk conditions and supports the message that the same deadly hazards keep showing up -- and getting missed.

    Repeating Hazards

    The same deadly risks keep showing up job after job—and still get missed.

    Icon showing a stack of papers to represent cluttered inspections and buried safety hazards

    Important Stuff Gets Lost 

    Traditional inspections bury serious hazards in bloated reports.

    Track people. Prevent Repeated Incidents. It conveys the idea that field teams need clarity and pattern recognition to take meaningful action.

    No Clear Target

    Crews don't always know what to look for—or what to do when they find it.

    What Your Peers Are Doing—And Why It’s Working

    Three field-tested examples of how a High-Risk Activity (HRA) focus helps crews spot and stop serious hazards.

    Faster Inspections. Smarter Focus.

    See how Jon Gregg uses HRAs to cut noise and stay focused on what really puts crews at risk.

    Track People. Prevent Repeat Incidents.

    Josh Duey explains how identifying who’s involved in incidents can change outcomes across the board.

    One Trend. Company-Wide Protection.

    Ryan Binkley shows how a single fall hazard pattern helped make every site safer.

    Where HRAs Fit Into the Work You're Already Doing

    • During safety walks: Crews flag high-risk activities—like pressurized lines or exposed edges—so they’re fixed before someone gets hurt.

    • In toolbox talks: Supervisors share real HRA observations to coach crews on what nearly went wrong—and how to avoid it next time.

    • When patterns emerge: A fall protection issue on one site leads to a company-wide check-in—before someone else makes the same mistake.

    Get the Toolkit. Put HRAs to Work Tomorrow.

    Cover of the HRA Safety Toolkit with a light shadow all around. It shows the HammerTech Hazard Wheel on the front, and a grayscale photo of a steel worker in a lift at the bottom.

    This isn’t a whitepaper—it’s a field kit.

    Download includes:

    • Fillable HRA Observation Template

    • Inspection Checklist with real hazard prompts

    • Pre-Task Plan with HRA focus built in

    • Crew huddle worksheet

    • Pro tips, rollout guide & the Decision Tree

    Ready to download. Easy to use. Built for the jobsite.

    Get your HRA Safety Toolkit