Updated: April 21st, 2009 03:37 PM GMT-05:00
Safety Tips for Working Around Electrical and Other Utilities
Contractor Safety - Preventing Electrical Injuries is a safety training DVD intended for use with all professional contractors. Produced by the Burn Foundation and PECO, the video highlights risk areas for aerial, underground, and electrical work and demonstrates the safe usage of construction equipment and vehicles around electrical and other utilities. This resource, which typically sells for $75, is currently being offered to ForConstructionPros.com members at the discounted rate of $45. For more information on
Contractor Safety - Preventing Electrical Injuries , visit
https://www.burnfoundation.org//burnsafe/multimedia.cfm or to order a copy of the DVD at the discounted rate, call (215) 545-3816.
Dennis Gleason
My day started out like any other day I had experienced as a lineman for more than 10 years. Once I arrived at the job site, I prepared to perform the small simple task of repairing an elbow on a cable, like I had done a thousand times previously.
However, when I came in direct contact with a 7,620-volt power line, which blew a 140-amp fuse, my life was changed forever. The next thing I knew I was in the back of an ambulance and being air lifted to a local hospital, where I spent the next two months. I was treated for second and third degree burns over 20 percent of my body.
As a survivor of the devastating effects of an electrical contact injury, a training specialist for PECO Energy and a member of the Burn Foundation's Survivors' Advisory Council in the Philadelphia region, I feel compelled to share my experience and knowledge with contractors and others in the construction industry in an effort to keep you and your co-workers safe on the job site.
Applying the below safety rules consistently at your job site can save your life and the lives of your co-workers:
- Always assume power lines are live. This applies to power lines on utility poles as well as those near homes and buildings. Even though you may notice a covering on a line, never assume it is safe to touch. Even momentary contact with power lines can cause injury or death.
- Never stand ladders near power lines. When working on or near ladders, keep the ladder, tools and anything else you may be carrying at least 10 feet from power lines.
- Keep all cranes, scaffolding and high reach equipment away from power lines. Contact with a power line can cause serious burns or electrocution. Remember to work a safe distance from all power lines. When performing construction activities, keep equipment at least 10 feet from power lines and 25 feet from transmission tower lines. Use a spotter to ensure compliance with the line clearance. If clearance cannot be obtained, request that the utility de-energize the lines.
- Keep yourself and others away from any fallen power lines. Because it is difficult to know whether a fallen power line is live or not, it is imperative that you call your local utility right away and report the location of the down wires. If a line falls on your car, stay in your car. If you must get out of the car, be sure to jump clear, being careful not to touch any part of the car and the ground at the same time, while staying clear of the fallen line.
- Do not climb or trim trees near power lines. Hire a qualified contractor to trim trees near power lines. If you have any questions about removing limbs or trees near power lines, call the local utility.
- Call your local Underground Utility Locating Service. By law, most states require you call your local utility to identify any gas, electric, telephone and other utility facilities before you dig. Last year, a nationwide 8-1-1 Call Before You Dig number went into operation. Whether you are planting a tree, building a fence or laying foundation, contacting a line with a shovel, pick or other piece of equipment can result in injury or death.
How often has a Tri-Axle come to the job site to drop off a load of stone near the construction entrance, backed up, raised the dump bed, and began moving forward? All the time, watching where the stones were to be dumped, being sure not to strike anyone? The attention to detail such as the overhead power lines is often overlooked. If the dump bed tears down power lines, exposing personnel to dangers not normally encountered, how should you react?
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Safety Tips for Working Around Electrical and Other Utilities by Dennis Gleason
(08/26/09 - 02:24 PM)
Everyone should heed - to the "t" - what Dennis Gleason advises from his painful, personal experience. Nothing is worth the suffering electrocution and burns cause - and caution coupled with knowledge and good judgment is an uncompromising rule for everyones workday.
Bob Gordon
Philadelphia OA