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Comparison Guide

Stop Construction Fence Panel Theft With Anti-Lift Brackets and Lockable Couplers

Real incidents from Texas to Calgary show how thieves bypass temporary fencing. Learn the two-part hardware fix for construction fence panel theft.

Table of Contents

Stay Informed on Site Security

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Prevent construction fence panel theft

Use anti-lift brackets for security

Install lockable couplers on every joint

Secure every vulnerable fence connection

Introduction to Construction Fence Panel Theft

At 9:54 p.m. at a Colorado jobsite, a security operator watched a suspect force through the perimeter fence and start filling a rolling backpack with materials. No bolt cutters, no ladder, and no gate involved. Just a fence panel that gave way under direct pressure. That incident is one of dozens documented across North American construction sites in the past several years, and it points to a pattern worth taking seriously. Construction fence panel theft rarely starts at the gate. It starts at the panel connection itself, the point where two sections meet on a rubber foot and a simple coupler nut. Once you see how often that connection is the actual entry point, the fix becomes obvious, and it is not a bigger padlock.

Source, ECAM Security, Thief Caught in the Act on Colorado Construction Site, April 2025. Also documented on YouTube as Construction Site Thief Arrested After Fence Breach, March 2026.

Why Standard Temporary Fencing Is a Jobsite Perimeter Security Weak Point

Whether panels sit on rubber block feet or steel feet, the design logic is the same across the industry. Panels connect to their neighbors with a simple coupler and can be repositioned by one or two workers in minutes. That is exactly the flexibility you want during mobilization. It is exactly what you do not want after the crew goes home. This tension is written into the regulations themselves. The Alberta Building Code , the Winnipeg Construction Bylaw , and OSHA all require secure site fencing while also requiring that the fencing remain movable for worker access. The Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo notes that panels must be wired together and adequately braced so they are not easily bypassed, which directly acknowledges that a standard connection is not sufficient on its own. Without added hardware, a panel can be lifted, pushed, or uncoupled, creating a gap that bypasses every lock on the gate.

Real Construction Fence Panel Theft Incidents Across North American Jobsites

United States: Examples of Construction Fence Panel Theft

Texas has produced some of the most consistent examples. In Hays County, suspects stole a boom lift and generator after breaching the perimeter. In Northside Houston, crews reported drive-by equipment thefts in broad daylight at sites with standard fencing. In Denton, five sites reported burglaries in a single week, resulting in tens of thousands of dollars in losses. One Texas site was breached at 11:20 p.m. by a trespasser who worked their way around the fence line until it gave.

In Seattle, a trespasser was filmed rolling under the perimeter fence overnight, a method that leaves no visible sign of forced entry. At a separate industrial site, someone stole spools of copper wire, kicked them under the fence, then climbed back over to retrieve them, returning a second time. A Ballard apartment project was hit four times in four months, losing $ 40,000 worth of copper wiring before tracking devices led police to a connected operation.

Canadian Examples of Construction Fence Panel Theft

In Ontario, an operator watched a suspect lean their body weight against a fence panel at 1:37 a.m., shift it off their foot, and step through the gap. No tools, no noise. In Calgary, a fence line collapsed under lateral pressure as a suspect tried to flee because nothing beyond a standard coupler nut held the panels together. In Winnipeg and Steinbach, contractors have described site theft as reaching epidemic proportions, a trend confirmed by Manitoba Heavy Construction Association security guidance, with one case in which thieves climbed over an unsecured perimeter to strip 37 bundles of shingles from a building under construction.

Anti-lift bracket installed on the foot of a temporary fence panel at a construction site.

The First Fix, Anti-Lift Bracket Temporary Fencing

An anti-lift bracket is a galvanized steel component that anchors a fence panel to its foot. The lower end slides beneath the foot, and the upper end hooks onto the coupler, creating a connection that prevents the panel from being lifted straight up from its base.

At the Ontario site where the panel was pushed off its foot, a bracket at that section would have stopped the attempt at first contact. Installation uses standard fence clips, so no specialist training is required, and most units weigh well under half a kilogram, which keeps deployment fast across a long perimeter. Industry guidance suggests one bracket every third panel for lower-risk interior lines, with full coverage at gates, laydown areas, and any fence line facing a public road.

Worker installing an anti-climb lockable coupler at a fence panel connection point.

The Second Fix, Anti-Climb Lockable Couplers

A standard coupler connects two panels with a nut that any 19mm spanner will loosen, the same wrench sold at any hardware store. In the Calgary incident, which is exactly what failed. The fence line separated under lateral force because the connection point had nothing holding it beyond a basic nut.

An Anti-Climb Lockable Coupler replaces the standard nut with a proprietary profile that releases only with a matching socket key. Fit the locking side to the interior, site-facing edge of the fence line so the mechanism is never exposed to anyone standing outside the perimeter, and manage the spanner key with the same discipline as a gate key, logged and limited to supervisors. Left unmanaged, the spanner defeats the entire upgrade.

Why You Need Both Anti-Lift Brackets and Lockable Fence Couplers

Anti-lift brackets and Lockable Couplers solve different problems, which is exactly why one alone still leaves a gap. In Calgary, the failure was at the coupler. In Ontario, it was at the base. In Colorado, the suspect forced through the line itself, a combined failure at both points. Deploy both together, and an intruder needs a specific tool and knowledge of the key system to get through the panel line, which raises the effort past what most opportunistic attempts are willing to spend. That combination is a reasonable baseline for any site handling copper, generators, or other high-value materials. This exposure is not limited to the night shift either, as covered in our summer daylight risk blog.

What Temporary Fence Security Hardware Means for Bids and Insurance

Owners and general contractors increasingly ask about jobsite security during the bidding process, particularly on projects with long timelines or expensive materials on site. A contractor who can point to a specific hardware standard, brackets on every panel, lockable couplers on every joint, and keys logged and tracked presents a stronger picture than a fence-and-padlock answer. Insurance carriers writing commercial construction coverage, such as IAT Insurance Group, list perimeter fencing and access control among standard theft prevention measures, and law enforcement advisories in several provinces, including the Alberta RCMP business crime prevention advisory, recommend fencing upgrades directly during underwriting conversations. Factoring this hardware standard into your construction site security budget early avoids costly retrofits once a project is already underway.

Laydown area with copper conduit and lumber staged behind a secured fence line.

A Practical Deployment Guide for Jobsite Perimeter Security

  • Gates and vehicle access points get full coverage, both hardware types on every panel
  • Fence lines facing public roads or high foot traffic areas get full coverage on both types
  • Interior fence lines separating lower-risk zones get one anti-lift bracket every third panel, paired with lockable couplers throughout
  • Laydown areas holding copper, generators, or other high-value materials get treated the same as a gate, full coverage on both, as outlined in our construction site theft prevention guide
Close-up of a standard coupler nut and spanner beside a fence panel joint.

Common Construction Fence Panel Theft Mistakes Worth Avoiding

  • Installing lockable couplers but leaving the spanner key unmanaged, which defeats the upgrade
  • Covering the front gate but leaving side and rear lines on standard hardware, which is exactly where the Calgary fence line failed
  • Assuming a taller or heavier panel is automatically more secure, when panel weight does not stop a lift or uncouple attempt
  • Treating hardware upgrades as a one-time purchase rather than a standard applied to every new mobilization

Closing the Gap on Your Jobsite Perimeter Security

The incidents in this article span six different jurisdictions and several years, and they share one detail. The site had fencing that was not secured at the hardware level. The entry point was never the gate. It was a panel connection that nothing was holding in place.

Recommended Products

Anti-Climb Platinum Fence Panel

The Anti-Climb Platinum Fence Panel is Broadfence's top-tier security panel and it is available for purchase anywhere in North America.
Anticlimb Platinum Fence Panel

Anti-Lift Bracket

The Anti-Lift Bracket prevents unauthorized lifting or removal of temporary fence panels from their base supports. The Bracket is installed between panels and stands. This pre-galvanized accessory improves perimeter security, reduces tampering, and protects sites. It is best for theft-prevention zones, overnight closures, and public-facing projects. The Anti-Lift Bracket minimizes fence movement and supports compliance …
Anti-Lift Bracket

Anti-Climb Lockable Coupler

Enhance your site security with Broadfence Anti-Climb Lockable Coupler. These couplers use a unique griplock nut that is specifically designed to resist tampering. Because the nut is countersunk into the clamp, you can only loosen the coupler with a customized socket. No finger or normal tool can reach in there. This elevated level of security …
Anticlimb Lockable Coupler

FAQ

Most panels sit on a steel foot and connect through a simple coupler nut. A panel can be pushed sideways, lifted straight up, or the coupler loosened with a common wrench, none of which requires specialist tools. In one Ontario case, a suspect pushed a panel off its foot with bodyweight alone and walked through the gap.

Both, since each stops a different failure mode. The bracket stops vertical lifting. The coupler stops horizontal separation. A Calgary incident shows a fence line collapsing under lateral pressure, a coupler failure, while an Ontario case shows a panel pushed off its base, an anti-lift failure.

Full coverage at gates, laydown areas, and any line facing a public road. One bracket every third panel is reasonable for lower-risk interior sections, but never leave a gate or high-value laydown area at reduced spacing.

Yes. Anti-climb lockable couplers are built to fit standard round tube fencing already common across North American supply chains, so retrofitting an existing perimeter usually does not require replacing panels.

Yes. Industry reports have tracked thousands of confirmed break-ins at active commercial sites with year-over-year increases, and cities including Calgary and Los Angeles have published rising theft numbers tied directly to unsecured fence lines. The TrueLook State of Construction Site Security Report backs this trend with detailed year-over-year break-in data.

It can. Carriers writing commercial construction coverage list perimeter fencing and access control among standard theft prevention measures, and a documented hardware standard gives underwriters something concrete to evaluate rather than a general assurance.

Leaving the spanner key unmanaged. A lockable coupler only works if the release key is logged and limited to supervisory staff, just as a gate key would be.

Sources

[1] ECAM Security. (2025). Thief caught in the act on Colorado construction site.
https://ecam.com/security-videos/thief-caught-in-action-on-colorado-construction-site

[2] ECAM Security and Stealth Monitoring. (2023). Cameras catch suspect moving perimeter fence to gain access to construction site.
https://ecam.com/security-blog/cameras-catch-suspect-moving-perimeter-fence-to-gain-access-to-construction-site

[3] ECAM Security and Stealth Monitoring. (2025, April). Texas construction trespasser caught.
https://ecam.com/security-blog/trespasser-caught-in-action-at-texas-construction-site

[4] Stealth Monitoring. (2025, March). Remote video monitoring catches a stealthy slide under a construction site fence.
https://stealthmonitoring.com/catch-of-the-month/construction-site-fence

[5] ECAM Security. (2025). Washington construction site, wire theft, and fence jump.
https://ecam.com/security-blog/construction-surveillance-catches-fence-jumping-burglar-clients-site

[6] KOMO News and Seattle Police Department. (2026, January 10). Police find drug-filled cars while investigating $40K copper wire theft at Ballard construction site.
https://komonews.com

[7] Rangers Security Group. (2025, October 21). Security intrusion resolved at a Calgary construction site.
https://www.rangerssecuritygroup.com/security-intrusion-resolved-calgary-under-construction-site

[8] CTV News Calgary. (2026, February 2). Construction site thefts are on the rise, impacting homebuyers.
https://www.ctvnews.ca/calgary/article/construction-site-thefts-on-the-rise-impacting-homebuyers/

[9] CBC Manitoba. (2024, August 16). Winnipeg construction company laments rise in thefts.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/manitoba-theft-at-construction-job-sites-1.7297443

[10] Winnipeg Free Press. (2025, November 28). Stealing thieves’ thunder, private security at Steinbach job sites.

[11] MHCA, Manitoba Heavy Construction Association. (2026, May 18). Theft in construction is on the rise in Winnipeg.
https://mhca.mb.ca/worksafely-news/theft-in-construction-growing-in-winnipeg/

[12] TrueLook and Noonlight. (2026). State of construction site security report.
https://www.truelook.com/guide/state-of-construction-site-security-report

[13] WTVR CBS 6 Richmond. (2025, August 7). Police report spike in brazen crime targeting construction workers.
https://www.wtvr.com/news/local-news/construction-worker-crime-aug-8-2025

[14] IAT Insurance Group. (2023, July 5). Theft is on the rise. Is your construction site secure?
https://www.insurancejournal.com/blogs/iat/2023/07/05/727389.htm

[15] Guardian Integrated Security. (2026). 40+ California construction site theft statistics.
https://www.guardianintegratedsecurity.com/construction-theft-statistics-california/

[16] Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo. (2022). Fencing during construction and demolition.
https://www.rmwb.ca/media/s3zipa3c/fencing-during-construction-demolition.pdf

[17] Alberta RCMP. (2026, February 4). Alberta RCMP provides tips to prevent business break-ins.
https://rcmp.ca/en/alberta/news/2026/02/4350012

[18] MobileVideoGuard. (2025). How thieves bypass fences, and what you can do to stop them.
https://mobilevideoguard.com/how-thieves-bypass-fences-and-what-you-can-do-to-stop-them/

[19] Broadfence. (2025). Anti-Climb Lockable Coupler.
https://broadfence.com/product/anti-climb-lockable-coupler/

[20] ZND USA Fence. (2025). Security for temporary fencing and barriers.
https://www.znd.com/us/security-for-temporary-fencing-and-barriers/

[21] Heras Mobile. (2024). Security couplers for temporary fencing.
https://www.heras-mobile.us/couplers-tarpaulins-footings

Ready to Close the Gaps on Your Perimeter

Talk to a Broadfence representative about auditing your current site hardware before your next busy stretch of the season. Call 1.855.993.0499 in the U.S. or 204.400.1971 in Canada. See anti-lift brackets and anti-climb lockable couplers built for standard North American panel systems on the accessories page.


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