12/18/2025
A recent survey from Avetta of workers in high-risk industries reveals a noticeable disconnect between how safe workers feel and how safe their workplaces truly are. Nearly eight in 10 workers report feeling safe on the job, though many recognize that formal safety systems are incomplete, misunderstood or not used at all.
The survey’s findings point toward a “safety perception gap” that can leave organizations vulnerable to operational, reputational and legal risks. It also indicates that familiarity and routine may be masking vulnerabilities in safety programs, particularly around hazard reporting and system accountability.
Perception versus reality:
Hazards go unreported:
Why workers stay silent:
Leadership focus is improving:
Some key takeaways are that there is a strong interest in technology-enabled safety. Workers have even pointed out several tools they think could improve safety outcomes, including:
Additionally, the survey suggests that compliance alone is not enough to ensure real-world safety. When hazards are seen but not reported, and when workers assume systems are in place without verification, organizations face hidden risks that can escalate into major incidents. Avetta’s parallel findings in Australia show similar trends, indicating that this is a global challenge rather than a regional one.
The core takeaway for facility managers is clear: closing the safety perception gap requires visible systems, clear reporting pathways and a culture that encourages accountability – not just confidence.
Jeff Wardon, Jr., is the assistant editor of the facilities market.