Stay Safe
Learn from These Mistakes
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Take a lesson from these unfortunate, true stories
about job site mistakes. The "Dont do what they did!"
links will take you to relevant safety information on this site,
so you can prevent similar tragedies.
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Underground Lines Can Surprise You
A 20-year-old plumbers apprentice began to jackhammer
some concrete, not knowing that a power line lay just beneath
him. The jackhammer bit into the line and thousands of volts
of electricity surged through his body. The current exploded out
the back of his head and shoulder and through his foot, taking two
toes with it and burning away part of both knee joints. He spent
several months in the hospital healing from burns and it took him
two years to learn to walk again. The young man went on to become
an Olympic kayaker and competed at the 2000 games in Sydney, Australia,
where he was the flag bearer for the U.S. team. (Source: Cliff Meidl)
Don't do what he did!
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Don't Do Double Duty as Spotter and Ground Rigger
A crane operator was putting up steel beams for a building annex.
His brother-in-law was acting as both spotter and ground
rigger, attaching the steel beams to the crane. A high-voltage
line ran by the job site. The crane operator reminded the younger
man to help him keep the crane at least 15 feet from the line, but
something went wrong. The brother-in-law signaled the
crane to get too close to the line, and when he grabbed the crane
cable to attach a steel beam, he was electrocuted. (Source: Contractor
Beware video)
Don't do what they did!
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Watch Those Irrigation Pipes
A 19-year-old apprentice nurseryman was fatally electrocuted
while installing a sprinkler irrigation system. He apparently lifted
up a long aluminum pipe, and it contacted an overhead power line
28 feet off the ground. The young man received a shock of 22,000
volts of electricity. He was knocked to the ground and dropped the
pipe. He told his co-workers that he was okay, and got up. However,
he then staggered for about 25 feet before he collapsed and died.
(Source: Victoria Department of Labour, Occupational Health and
Safety Division)
Don't do what he did!
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A Spotter Could Have Saved Them
A truck driver and his employer (the company president) were electrocuted
when the boom of a truck-mounted crane contacted a 7,200-volt
power line. The driver was operating the crane by a handheld remote-control
unit and was unloading a cube of concrete blocks. While the driver,
the company president, and a masonry contractor were focused on
watching the blocks, the tip of the crane boom contacted the
overhead power line and completed a path to ground through the truck,
the remote control unit, and the driver. The company president tried
to help and apparently contacted the truck, completing a path to
ground through his body. He died on the scene. The truck driver
later died at the hospital. (Source: National Institute of Occupational
Safety and Health)
Don't do what they did!
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Don't Become a Victim by Helping
A 46-year-old man was electrocuted on a tree-trimming
job. The accident occurred as a hydraulic bucket came into contact
with a 7,620-volt line. A worker noticed that a tire on the
bucket truck was burning, attempted to move the truck, and was shocked.
He was not able to let go of the door handle. The 46-year-old was
electrocuted when he tried to free the worker from the door handle.
(Source: St. Joseph News-Press)
Don't do what he did!
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A Man in a Hurry
A Missouri contractor who called before digging hit a 6-inch
high-pressure gas line in an industrial park. He was told the gas
company would be locating a line at the site, but he began digging
the day before the date set for marking. The line was capped
within two hours of the accident, and fortunately there were no
injuries or damage. (Source: Underground Focus magazine)
Don't do what he did!
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