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Caught in Between Hazards

Caught in Between Hazards. Trench & Excavation. Soil Mechanics. What does soil weigh? Soil weighs about 120 lb/cu.ft. or 2,800 lb./cu.yd. Each foot of depth adds more pressure side pressure Once the pressure exceeds the ability of the soil to support itself, failure is possible. 120. 120.

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Caught in Between Hazards

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  1. Caught in Between Hazards

  2. Trench & Excavation

  3. Soil Mechanics • What does soil weigh? • Soil weighs about 120 lb/cu.ft. or 2,800 lb./cu.yd. • Each foot of depth adds more pressure side pressure • Once the pressure exceeds the ability of the soil to support itself, failure is possible 120 120 120 120 120

  4. Basic RequirementsCFR 1926.650-654 • Work must be supervised by a “Competent Person” • Protection is required over 5 feet deep or if there is a possibility of a cave-in • Excavations must be inspected daily and/or with changes • Access/Egress is required over 4 feet deep • A rescue plan must be in place

  5. Slope Protection • Soil Testing MUST be done • Slopes must be established based on soil class

  6. Benching • Benching is allowed in Class A & B soils • Bench steps must be cut behind the required slope line. Benching in Class A Soil Benching in Class B Soil

  7. Trench Shields or Boxes • Typically engineered for Type C soils • Can be used with all classes of soils • Shields can be moved horizontally with workers inside • Worker must stay inside shields

  8. Trench Shields Full depth shielding Shield in a Type B soil protecting only the bottom of the trench. Shields must be installed within 24 inches of the bottom and must assure no loss of soil below the shield.

  9. Barricade Excavations • Excavations must be barricaded or marked if they are not readily visible

  10. Utility Strikes ZAP!

  11. Utility LocatingOne-Call 811 • Proper marking of utilities • Know minimum clearance distances for adequate protection • Private utilities marked by property owner.

  12. Rescue • A rescue plan must be in place • Rescue of a buried worker is a slow and tedious process

  13. Caught between crane and carriage Causes of Crushing Fatalities Caught between equipment and …..

  14. Swinging/Rotating Equipment

  15. Barricade Swing Radius • Barricade the swing radius • Maintain 2' distance from fixed objects • What about excavators?

  16. Mechanical Moving Parts

  17. Preventing / Controlling / AbatingMaintenance Hazards • Lockout equipment • Place an energy-isolating device over the energy source • Bleed off stored energy • Lock it until the repair/maintenance work is completed • Tag out the equipment (when Lockout is not possible) • Place a tag over the energy source and start-up mechanisms • Label it with a written warning that remains in place until the work is done • Block disabled equipment

  18. Machine Guarding • Install and maintain all guards on tools and heavy equipment

  19. Pulley Guards

  20. Miter Saws This guard is bolted open Guards must cover the blade and only retract as the blade cuts through material.

  21. Grinders & Abrasive Saws • Guards must remain in place and eye protection must be worn • Best practice is to use face shields and hearing protection

  22. Incident Free • Planning • Assess site conditions prior to excavation • Site planning for equipment • Training • Excavation Safety • Working around mobile equipment • Inspection • Proper soil testing and trench inspection • Equipment inspection – mirrors, back up alarms, etc. • Inspection of tools, guards, etc.

  23. Incident Free • Oversight • Check site conditions before excavations • Assure operators of heavy equipment communicate • Lessons learned • Understand the consequences of cave-ins • Know the types of injuries that can occur from lack of guarding • Re-evaluate • Excavations plans and programs yearly • Equipment usage

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