
CGA Publishes 2024 DIRT Report
2024 DIRT Report Highlights Concerning Levels of Damages to Buried Utilities, Signals Need for Industry-Wide Changes
The Common Ground Alliance’s 2024 DIRT Report underscores persistent damage root causes, late locate challenges and a troubling plateau in damages despite proven solutions.
The Common Ground Alliance (CGA), the national, nonpartisan, nonprofit trade association working to prevent damage to buried infrastructure, published its 2024 Damage Information Reporting Tool (DIRT) Report. The latest analysis reveals that the CGA Index, which measures year-over-year damage trends, rose from 94.0 in 2023 to 96.7 in 2024, signaling that the industry is moving in the wrong direction in reducing damages to buried utilities.
The 2024 DIRT Report provides the most comprehensive accounting of damages to buried power, water, fiber, natural gas and other utility lines in the U.S. and Canada. This year’s report analyzed 196,977 unique damage reports from 2024, finding that despite organization-level success stories and sector-specific improvements, the industry is not on track to meet CGA’s “50-in-5” goal of reducing damages by 50% over five years.
“The 2024 DIRT Report makes it clear: Incremental change is not enough,” says Sarah K. Magruder Lyle, CGA president and CEO. “We know what works—effective, balanced enforcement, accurate mapping and timely locates—but without coordinated investment and accountability across all stakeholders, damages will continue to rise alongside ever-increasing construction activity. The stakes for public safety, service reliability and economic productivity are simply too high to accept the status quo.”
Persistent Root Causes Continue to Drive Damages
The 2024 DIRT Report shows that the top 10 root causes accounted for 85% of all reported damages, with patterns remaining remarkably consistent year-over-year. Utility work — particularly water/sewer and telecommunications/CATV — dominated nine of the top ten root causes, underscoring the need for targeted, sector-specific interventions.
The leading causes were:
- Failure to notify 811 (24.54%)
- Excavator failed to maintain clearance after verifying marks (16.07%)
- Facility not marked due to locator error (11.94%)
- Marked inaccurately due to locator error (8.58%)
- Improper excavation practice not listed elsewhere (6.75%)
- Excavator dug prior to verifying marks by potholing (4.94%)
- Facility not marked due to no response from operator/contract locator (4.71%)
- Excavator failed to shore excavation/support facilities (3.27%)
- Marks faded, lost or not maintained (2.17%)
- Facility not marked due to incorrect facility record/map (2.16%)
“The CGA Index tells us that damages are tracking with construction activity — not with the improvements we know are possible,” said Louis Panzer, executive director of North Carolina 811 and co-chair of CGA’s Data Reporting and Evaluation Committee. “The solutions are in front of us. What’s needed now is the will to implement them at scale, across every sector and with consistent accountability.”
Late Locates Risk Undermining Confidence in the 811 System
Analysis of data from eight 811 centers revealed that excavators faced an average 38% chance of being unable to start work on time due to incomplete locate responses. States with active enforcement programs for facility operators to properly locate and provide positive responses achieved significantly higher on-time rates than those without — suggesting the challenge is solvable with the right policies.
Unpredictability of locate timing not only delays projects but can also erode excavator confidence in the 811 process, potentially contributing to the top root cause: failure to notify 811.
CGA’s Board of Directors today issued a statement highlighting the attention these findings demand. The statement, reads in part:
“We call upon the industries we represent—each a critical stakeholder in damage prevention—to commit immediately to the systemic enforcement mechanisms, targeted investments and coordinated accountability measures outlined in the 2024 DIRT Report. ”

Data-Driven Recommendations for Breaking Through the Plateau
The 2024 DIRT Report calls for systematic, enforceable standards and targeted sector interventions to reverse the upward damage trend, including:
- Reduce damages caused by failure to contact 811 beforehand through improved enforcement of both 811 notification requirements and locate timeliness via stronger penalties for noncompliance, “best value” locator contracts, GPS-enabled mapping and transparent on-time performance metrics.
- Targeting high-risk sectors—particularly water/sewer and telecom—with contractor training, investments in mapping improvements and contract reforms.
- Scaling proven practices from organizations that have successfully reduced damages to the industry as a whole.
- Implementing balanced enforcement that holds all stakeholders accountable, not just excavators.
- Accelerating data-driven decision-making by improving DIRT reporting quality and participation.
The complete 2024 DIRT Annual Report, along with the Interactive Dashboard featuring data from 2022-2024, is available at dirt.commongroundalliance.com.
SOURCE – Common Ground Alliance (CGA)
LATEST POSTS
- From A Mixed Face to A Full Face of Rock: Northeast Remsco Delivers in High-Strength Rock Northern Virginia Project for a Private Client.
- Dig Smart, Dig Safe: Unleashing the Power of TRUVAC’s DigRight™ Technology
- Guided Auger Boring: A Precision Approach to Trenchless Utility Installation
- CGA Publishes 2024 DIRT Report
- 2025 North American Microtunneling Job Log