Incident Management (Safety) is a structured process used in construction and infrastructure projects to report, investigate, manage, and close safety incidents in a consistent and controlled manner.
Safety incidents can range from near misses and minor injuries through to serious injuries, environmental harm, and high‑potential events. Effective incident management ensures incidents are responded to appropriately, investigated thoroughly, and used as learning opportunities to prevent recurrence.
In practical terms, incident management provides project teams with visibility, accountability, and traceability over safety events, supporting compliance with WHS legislation and strengthening overall safety performance.
What is a Safety Incident?
A safety incident is any unplanned event that resulted in, or had the potential to result in:
- Injury or illness
- Damage to plant, equipment, or property
- Environmental harm
- Disruption to works
Common types of safety incidents include:
- Near misses
- First aid injuries
- Medical treatment injuries
- Lost Time Injuries (LTI)
- High‑potential incidents (HiPos)
Capturing all incident types, not just injuries, is critical to proactive safety management.
What Does Incident Management Involve?
A robust safety incident management process typically includes the following key stages:
1. Incident Reporting – Incidents are reported as soon as practicable by:
- Workers
- Supervisors
- Safety personnel
Reports typically capture:
- What happened
- When and where it occurred
- Who was involved
- Immediate actions taken
Early reporting ensures incidents are managed correctly from the outset.
2. Immediate Response and Controls – Once reported, initial actions may include:
- Making the area safe
- Providing first aid or medical treatment
- Isolating plant or equipment
- Implementing temporary controls
These actions reduce the risk of further harm.
3. Incident Classification – Incidents are commonly classified based on:
- Actual consequence
- Potential consequence
- Injury severity
This helps determine investigation requirements and escalation levels.
4. Incident Investigation – Investigations aim to identify:
- What happened
- Why it happened
- Underlying and root causes
Investigations may involve:
- Statements
- Site inspections
- Photos and evidence
- Review of procedures and controls
The focus is on learning and prevention, not blame.
5. Corrective and Preventive Actions – Following investigation, actions are raised to:
- Address immediate causes
- Improve controls
- Update procedures
- Provide additional training
Actions are assigned owners and due dates to ensure closure.
6. Close‑Out and Review – An incident is only closed once:
- Actions are completed
- Controls are verified
- Learnings are communicated
This ensures incidents drive real improvement rather than becoming paperwork exercises.
Why Incident Management Is Critical on Construction Projects
Effective incident management delivers significant safety and compliance benefits.
1. Prevents Repeat Incidents: Understanding root causes allows projects to eliminate or control hazards before similar incidents occur again.
2. Strengthens Safety Culture: Encouraging reporting, especially of near misses, and builds trust and reinforces that safety comes before production.
3. Supports WHS Compliance: Regulators and clients expect formal incident reporting and investigation processes that meet legislative requirements.
4. Improves Risk Awareness: Incident trends highlight high‑risk activities, locations, or behaviours that require targeted intervention.
5. Protects Workers and the Business: Well‑managed incidents reduce injury severity, downtime, reputational risk, and potential legal exposure.
Real‑World Examples of Safety Incidents
Common incidents captured on construction sites include:
- Near Miss: Plant operating close to pedestrians
- Manual Handling: Muscle strain during lifting
- Slips, Trips & Falls: Uneven ground or poor housekeeping
- Plant & Equipment: Contact with moving machinery
- Electrical: Damaged leads or temporary power issues
- Environmental: Fuel or chemical spills
Each incident provides valuable insight when managed correctly.
Incident Management vs Hazard Reporting
These two processes work together but serve different purposes:
- Hazard Observations identify potential issues before an event occurs
- Incident Management responds to events that have already occurred
Strong hazard reporting reduces incidents, while strong incident management ensures lessons are learned when incidents do occur.
Digital Incident Management in Glaass
In Glaass, safety incident management is delivered through structured digital workflows aligned to real construction environments.
Teams can:
- Report incidents onsite using mobile devices
- Capture photos, locations, and statements
- Classify incidents and assign severity
- Conduct investigations and root cause analysis
- Raise and track corrective actions
- Maintain a complete audit trail for compliance and reporting
By digitising incident management, Glaass ensures incidents are reported early, managed consistently, and closed properly, without any paperwork delays.
Final Thoughts
Incident management is not just about recording injuries; it’s about learning, prevention, and continuous improvement.
When managed effectively, safety incidents become:
- A source of insight
- A driver of better controls
- A foundation for stronger safety culture
Rather than reacting after the fact, strong incident management helps construction teams build safer sites and protect their people.

