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Cass
11-23-2006, 05:39 AM
General Maintenance Person Asphyxiated Attempting to Repair Water Leak
Introduction:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Division of Safety Research (DSR) is currently conducting the Fatal Accident Circumstances and Epidemiology (FACE) Project, which is focusing primarily upon selected electrical-related and confined space-related fatalities. The purpose of the FACE program is to identify and rank factors that influence the risk of fatal injuries for selected employees.
On October 21, 1986, a general maintenance person was asphyxiated when he became lodged in a water meter pit.
Contacts/Activities:
Officials of the Occupational Safety and Health Program for the State of Indiana in cooperation with the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), Division of Safety Research (DSR) notified NIOSH of this fatality and requested technical assistance. This case has been included in the FACE Project. On February 3, 1987, a safety spe******t conducted a site visit and met with representatives of the company which employed the victim. Interviews were conducted with the victim's foreman and a co-worker. The accident site was visited and photographs were taken.
Background/Overview of Employer's Safety Program:
The victim worked as a general maintenance person for a construction company which employed 13 persons. The construction company provides construction-related maintenance for a local chain of restaurants. The safety functions at the construction company are managed by the Director of Operations. A written safety policy and a comprehensive safety program exist. Management personnel also conduct weekly staff meetings including discussions of safety-related matters.
Synopsis of Events:
On the morning of October 21, 1986, a supervisor for the construction company instructed a maintenance person (the victim) to inspect and repair a leaking water valve. The water valve (a screw handle type) controlled the flow of water from the municipal water system to a local restaurant. After the supervisor instructed the victim, he then left the site of the restaurant to check on another job.
As there were no eye witnesses to the accident, the following scenario is based on inspection of the accident site and from interviews conducted with supervisors from the construction company and the state OSHA compliance officer.
Apparently the victim proceeded to the fiberglass water meter pit (14" diameter x 4' deep) approximately 25 feet from the side of the restaurant where the water valve was located. The water meter pit was buried in the ground and the top of the pit was at ground level. A metal cap was attached to the rim of the water meter pit and a water meter with an in-line shut off valve. A screw handle water valve, and the municipal water line were located in the pit. The valves were approximately 36 inches below the top of the pit (or ground level). The victim removed the metal cap covering the pit and placed the cap on the ground next to the pit opening. He then knelt beside the opening on both knees and reached into the pit until his head, both arms, and part of his shoulders were inside the water meter pit. Apparently, the victim became stuck upside down in the opening and could not free himself, causing asphyxiation due to positional deprivation of air.
NOTE: The victim was observed drinking alcoholic beverages before starting work on the morning of the accident. A blood alcohol analysis of postmortem blood found a concentration of ethanol of 188 mg/dl (0.18%). The legal intoxication level for Indiana is 0.10%. Of the 129 occupational electrical-related or confined space-related fatalities evaluated by NIOSH, as part of the FACE program, this is the second incident where the use of drugs or alcohol have been identified as contributory factors.
Cause of Death:
The coroner's report listed the cause of death as positional asphyxia.
Recommendations/Discussion:
Recommendation #1: Supervisory personnel should routinely monitor employee performance to determine if employees have impaired physical and mental capabilities which may be related to the use of alcohol, illegal or over-the-counter drugs, or prescription medications.
Discussion: This fatality occurred because the victim's physical and mental capabilities were impaired by the ingestion of alcohol. Supervisory personnel should be trained to recognize changes in job performance as they may relate to alcohol or drug use and in accepted and proven methods of dealing with these problems. Employees should not be assigned tasks when impaired physical and mental capabilities are observed, but should be taken to medical personnel who are trained to deal with these problems.
Recommendation #2: Supervisory personnel should identify, evaluate, and address all possible hazards associated with the job site.
Discussion: When employees are expected to work alone at job sites, the area should first be evaluated and all possible hazards identified and addressed by supervisory personnel. The location of the water valve inside the water meter pit required the use of extension tools, thereby eliminating the need to enter the water meter pit (even partially).

master plumber mark
11-23-2006, 07:27 AM
that reminds me of some of the
retarted morons I used to have work
for me over the years......


they always drank Vodka,
something you could not smell

thank god that I never had deaths due to any auto accidents because of them
or lawsuits due to them either...

Terry
11-23-2006, 12:00 PM
Never offer alcohol to workers.

Construction is one of the most dangerous jobs out there.
There is no way that you should endanger your safety or someone elses health that way.

I worked on jobsite, in the heat of the Summer, 95 degrees during the day, which might as well have been 110 somewhere else.
We were starting at 6:00AM to beat the heat.

The framing crew drank beer all day long.
One day, the head framer, in his 40's fell from the second story into the elevator pit.
Concussion, broken leg and arm.
He couldn't go back to work for months.
It was his business, so he was just out of luck, for all the work he could have done for all that time.

When someone offers me a beer while I"m doing work, I just show them my hands. Look, I still have all my fingers.
Not everybody in construction can say that.

rudytheplbr
11-23-2006, 12:43 PM
I realize this is a plumbing forum site, but check out "Triple Door" this guy rocks.

Rudy:cool: :)

molo
11-26-2006, 06:49 PM
I was working for a partner owned heating/plumbing company. Myself and the 2 partners were replacing almost all of the baseboard water pipes that had frozen and burst in a student rental home. We were in there for a couple of days. Usually working in the evening because it was not scheduled work. My bosses discovered a couple of 12-packs in the fridge and drank them all. Leaving the emptys all over the house. Knowing the owner of the rental property stopped by every once and a while, I spent alot of my time scanning around the house picking up emptys and hiding them! How ridiculous, and they never replaced the beer!

Molo

Cookie
11-26-2006, 08:28 PM
I had alot of problems with this one plumber I had sometime ago. I had thought I smelled whiskey when I went upstairs. I started looking around and saw him chugging from the bottle. When I asked him to leave, he asked me if I wanted some and started pushing the bottle at me. And, himself. We got into it then and there. This was sometime after he had lunch, and by this time, when I saw him drinking, he was pretty lit. I had even offered this licensed plumber, coffee when he got here, and had a pot on. Well, he told me he had a thermos. I wonder now, what else was in that thermos, it sure was not coffee, I bet.

Randyj
11-26-2006, 09:38 PM
These stories bring back memories of one of my first jobs after high school. I felt compelled to leave home and went to Atlanta to get away for a while. There I lived with an aunt and found a job working for on a construction crew building pre-fab houses (kit homes). It was the hippie days of 1970. Those guys would smoke a joint then pass a bottle around. I'd never even seen grass before then. Fighting broke out one day. A wall was set up on the decking and braced. These guys banged into the wall while fighting and almost knocked it down. I was young and it scared me so bad that I left the job and never went back. From that day on I've been very wary of working on construction crews and prefer to work alone. It is just too dangerous to be around horseplay, drinking, and drugs on any construction job. A year or so earlier I lost a good friend who was working in a ditch when his head was crushed by a backhoe operator. I'm a safety freak when working with other people... still alive and have all my fingers and toes too!

Cass
11-27-2006, 05:25 AM
I have talked to quite a few cops in different towns over the past few years and the #s seems to all be very close. If alcohol and drugs were eliminated they told me the # of call they respond to would drop by around 75%.

What a tax savings that would be not to need so many cops on the payroll.

master plumber mark
11-27-2006, 05:36 AM
I remember when I was in my mid 20s and working on
some condo construction sites one summer how drugs and beer
were always around....

Fridays would come around and pay day....
then some one would go buy a case of beer...

...the next thing you knew you were having a
tailgate party with a bunch of dumbasses on the job site
.....I always got out of there pretty quickly...

I remember all the "beer talk" from the dumb ass plumbers...

I remember watching electicians smokeing joints while pulling
wires...

about the same from the roofers and drywall people too...

I remember the painters huffing laquer paint all day


It makes me wonder which trade is really absolute worst.


Its all a hazey memory now ----

And like President Clinton, I never inhaled....