Department of Labor Reports Lowest Number of Worker Death Investigations Since 2017

December 4, 2024

Fewer workers are dying from hazards in areas where the U.S. Department of Labor’s (DOL) Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has focused its enforcement resources. Preliminary agency data show a decrease in fatalities the agency is mandated to investigate, including significant reductions in fatal injuries from trench collapses and falls, two of the leading causes of death among construction industry workers.

“These numbers are promising evidence that stronger enforcement and collaboration with labor and management, driven by the Biden-Harris administration’s worker-centered approach, is saving lives,” said Douglas Parker OSHA, assistant secretary. “Most striking is the improvement in areas we have focused on with employers and unions. Our state program partners have also seen improvements.”

In fiscal year 2024, federal OSHA investigated 826 worker deaths, an 11% reduction from 928 in the previous year. Excluding COVID-19-related deaths, this is the lowest number of worker fatalities OSHA has been mandated to investigate since FY 2017.

OSHA’s National Emphasis Program on Falls, the leading cause of serious work-related injuries and fatalities in the construction industry, saw fatal falls investigated by federal OSHA drop from 234 to 189, a decrease of almost 20%. Preliminary data from state OSHA programs, pending validation by federal OSHA, indicates more than 15% fewer fatalities in state jurisdictions. Currently, federal OSHA covers about 60% of private-sector employees and approved state programs cover the remaining workers.

“While fewer workers have died from the hazards OSHA investigates, we still lose more than 5,000 workers each year in largely preventable incidents,” Parker said. “While we’re proud of this progress, our work is far from over. Reducing worker deaths means embracing an approach that makes worker health and safety a core value in every workplace. Only then can we fully address all the causes and factors that lead to workers dying needlessly on the job.”

Latest Articles

ISSA Media Alert
February 10, 2026 Jeff Cross

FIFA World Cup 2026: Protecting Athlete Performance, Fan Safety, and Venue Continuity

February 9, 2026 Dennis Crowley

Modernizing Facility Security With Drones

February 6, 2026 Rosie Rangel

Building a Bridge for the Hispanic Cleaning Community

Sponsored Articles

US 31DC XC2 12V Battery
January 30, 2026

US 31DC XC2 12V Battery

January 30, 2026

US 305N XC2 6V Battery

January 30, 2026

Built for Daily Cleaning Demands

Recent News

flu, sick

Seasonal Flu Activity Remains Elevated

NYC Becomes First City to Join WHO’s Global Outbreak Response Network

Small Business Administration Bars Noncitizens From Loans