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One Platform, C 10


onstruction safety leaders rarely struggle with a lack of data. Instead, the challenge is often the


opposite: too many alerts, too many sys- tems, and not enough context to quickly


CALIFORNIA CONSTRUCTOR MAY/JUNE 2026


One Safety Story: How Connected Safety Technology Reduces Risk and Jobsite Stress


BY ELIZABETH TORREZ, REGIONAL DIRECTOR, TENNA


understand what’s happening across fleets, equipment, and jobsites. A sudden braking alert appears in one


system. A driver complaint comes in by phone. A near-miss report arrives later in


the day. Safety teams are left asking the same questions: What happened? Was it preventable? And how do we keep it from happening again? When safety data lives in disconnect- ed systems, answering those questions can take time, and we all know that in construction operations, time matters. Across the industry, contractors are


increasingly adopting connected safety technologies to help identify risks earlier and better understand incidents. When these tools are integrated alongside equip- ment telematics on a single platform, safety teams gain something that’s often missing from traditional safety programs: a complete picture. Instead of reacting to isolated alerts,


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