The fatal truth about workplace vehicles and moving equipment
Forklifts, trucks and other moving equipment are the backbone of many jobs, but they also are among the deadliest hazards in the workplace. These machines are heavy, powerful, and unpredictable; and they don’t forgive mistakes. One split second of inattention, one blind spot, one wrong move and someone’s life changes forever.
Tight spaces, blind corners, and constant movement make every interaction a risk—for operators and anyone on foot. So, ask yourself: Are you treating operational and behavioral safety with the urgency it deserves? Pre-shift inspections matter, but they’re not enough. Communicate the dangers, enforce the rules, and stay alert. Because when it comes to moving equipment, safety isn’t just a checklist; it could be the difference between life or death.
Staggering statistics
Lives are lost every year in incidents involving moving vehicles and equipment. Tragically, in many cases, these incidents were preventable and serve as a stark reminder that even routine tasks can turn deadly when safety measures are overlooked. These 2025 stories speak loud and clear:
- November 11: A 19-year-old mini excavator operator died after the equipment they were operating slid down a slippery embankment, rolled over, and partially threw the worker out of the vehicle. The excavator landed on the operator resulting in fatal injuries.
- October 27: OSHA is investigating the death of a 27-year-old worker found unconscious inside a freezer with blunt trauma to their lower extremity believed to have been caused by a forklift.
- June 30: A 23-year-old laborer was killed when an excavator bucket crushed them into a concrete structure. The excavator operator didn’t see the laborer when moving the bucket.
- April 15: A 64-year-old truck driver was fatally wounded when the rear dump trailer they were unhooking began rolling down the hill, striking the driver.
- March 21: OSHA has fined three affiliated companies in the vehicle battery industry for safety violations related to the death of 45-year-old worker who was run over by a forklift.
- February 27: A 35-year-old worker sustained fatal injuries from material that fell from a narrow aisle reach truck while walking along a pedestrian walkway.
Historical numbers continue to tell the story:
- While 2024 statistics are still being finalized, an industry estimate of forklift fatalities alone is at 85.
- In 2023, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported 205 fatalities from non-roadway motor vehicle incidents (e.g., forklifts, industrial equipment). The agency also reported 1,942 transportation-related fatalities and 1,252 motorized land vehicle deaths in 2023.
- The National Safety Council (NSC) reinforced the message with a report of 67 workers dying in 2023 alone in incidents involving forklifts, order pickers, or platform trucks.
- In 2022, the BLS reported 1,620 fatalities of transportation and material moving workers, making it the occupational group with the highest number of fatal work injuries for that year.
- Even the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) highlights the seriousness with their 2020 report of 150 struck-by fatalities in the construction industry and additional report of 66–87 construction worker struck-by deaths per year from 2011 to 2019.
Keep history from repeating itself
We must do more than just the minimum or wait for inspection results to protect workers from moving equipment and vehicle hazards. Regulations and compliance are the foundation for safety. However, we should strive to use statistics like these to drive conversations in the workplace. Zero in on the areas where your team faces the greatest risk.
- Engage workers in workplace assessments of vehicle use, moving equipment, and heavy machinery operation. The more workers can recognize the hazards while operating dangerous equipment, the more effective they can be with control measures.
- Take your time with training! Avoid the pressure of the clock and include hands-on training for operational skills. Allowing workers to practice real world scenarios gives them confidence they need and you the peace of mind you need.
- Stretch the conversation beyond inspections. Provide daily reminders, encourage near miss reporting, and engage leadership to reinforce safety and compliance daily.
- Implement engineering and administrative controls such as routine maintenance programs and traffic rules, designated travel paths, and visibility aids (e.g., mirrors, alarms).
- Ensure workers are certified in equipment and vehicle operation and are comfortable in operating the equipment. Not everyone is confident handling heavy machinery or moving equipment, which can lead to dangerous situations.
- Practice emergency response procedures for unexpected events like rollovers, load failures, and collisions.
- Remind workers that statistics like these represent a real person who has family and friends whose lives have changed forever.
Key to remember: Statistics aren’t just numbers; they’re lessons. By understanding the data behind moving vehicle and equipment fatalities, we can identify risks, change unsafe behaviors, and create a culture where every decision or behavior puts safety first.















































