Policies, training manuals, and safety meetings matter. But insurance does not ensure good intentions. It ensures controls that reduce foreseeable risk.
Visibility is one of the most visible—literally—controls an operation can implement.
When ANSI Class 2 & 3 apparel is consistently used and enforced, it signals:
- Awareness of pedestrian vulnerability
- Alignment with recognized safety standards
- A layered approach to loss prevention
From a loss-control perspective, this matters because visibility functions continuously. It does not depend on perfect behavior, flawless technology, or ideal conditions. It works every shift, in every yard, and during every interaction between people and machines.
Controls that operate continuously are viewed as stronger than those that rely on intermittent compliance.
Visibility is not a promise of safety.
It is evidence of control.
