This video recounts how a line crew safely unloaded heavy steel poles by identifying motion and gravity as STKY hazards. When a pole rolled off a flatbed, established controls—like a restricted access zone—prevented injury or damage. Post-event learning led to adding chocks for extra stability, showing how planning and capacity turn near misses into STKY successes.
Language: English
Electrical Contact Incident
This video reenacts an electrical contact incident caused by a change in work conditions and missing protective controls. It highlights how deviations in normal work can lead to serious injury and reinforces Human Performance principles. Crews learn to stop, reassess hazards with the Energy Wheel, and verify insulation, isolation, and observation before resuming work.
PVD Incident
This video recounts how a line crew safely managed an energized downed conductor after a storm. The foreman used a personal voltage detector, recognized the STKY hazard, and stopped work to alert his team and isolate the circuit. Their cautious approach, PPE use, and hazard awareness turned a potential tragedy into a STKY success.
The Capacity Model: Quanta’s Safety Philosophy
This video introduces Quanta’s shift from chasing zero incidents to building capacity for failure through the Capacity Model. Grounded in Human Performance principles, it recognizes that error is normal and focuses on strong controls for high-energy hazards. Crews, leaders, and partners learn to plan, execute, and learn together to keep every worker safe.
Bypass Pipe Pipeline
Rebar Cage Incident
Dead End Platform Incident
Marooka Incident
Live Line Tool Method
Operational Learning
This video shows how Quanta uses Learning Teams to shift from blame to learning. Instead of asking who failed, crews and leaders examine what failed and what went right, learning from both success and failure. By designing systems that expect human error, teams build stronger capacity and improve safety across every job site.