A 28-year old construction worker was crushed and killed while attempting to change a piece of equipment on the job in Prior Lake.  OSHA is inspecting.
The man, whose name was not released, was trying to change the bucket on a skid loader around 2:30 p.m. when he somehow got pinned between the bucket and the cab of the machine, according to the Scott County Sheriff's Office. He was working at Applied Ecological Services Inc. in the 21000 block of Mushtown Road. 

There is no time-out from employing the right safety rules at the job site. Construction work is extremely unforgiving and dangerous.

Four" Safety - Implement OSHA's Four-Step Safety Program

Construction Site Safety: Another worker ran over in Iowa and Texas.

The reported news item is that the 46-year-old man was directing a Skylift forklift operator when it ran him over, killing him. There is no report on the type of construction or the nature of the construction site. Nothing is reported as to the trade of the worker who was killed. The report comes out of Sherman, Texas, the location of the construction site. The workers residence appears to have been in Tishomingo, Oklahoma.

Construction Site Safety: Betting on OSHA violation

Violations that OSHA found included “a pattern of improper fall protection systems, flammable materials stored incorrectly, risks of electrical shock, faulty equipment and problematic record-keeping. The conditions prevailed at various parts of the site and in projects run by subcontractors as well as general contractor Perini Building Co.”

Alexandra Berzon does a nice job of exploring safety issues at those constructin sites. Read her latest article, After 6 die, OSHA finds violations, Summer sweep by federal, state agencies uncovered dozens of serious problems at the Las Vegas Sun Newspaper.

COMMENT: Emmitt Nelson, a former construction manager for Shell Oil who has conducted research for the Construction Industry Institute, said he's troubled that the 34 safety inspectors employed by Perini and others employed by subcontractors didn't spot and fix the safety problems before OSHA inspectors got to them.

I believe the issue at hand is that the 34 safety inspector's perini has employed,just aren't that good,to say the least.When i was both an ironworker and a safety Rep at the city center project,perini's people were never seen,unless there was an accident,they were less than versed in their own safety policy,let alone knowing the standards,bringing up any issue's with them was like pulling teeth,it was the "not in my yard so i'm not worried about it" scenario,even though it's their jobsite.They lacked in leadership skills all the way around from the top to the bottom,and the biggest thing i found were their basic disdain for the worker's,and, wanting to create animosity in the field for the worker's.

COMMENT: Did OSHA go through the site with a seeing eye dog? 42 companies on site and only 42 violations! And even then, they were either dismissed or the fines reduced. On a multi-billion dollar project, who cares about $66k?

If workers are waiting to be protected by Nevada OSHA, they will be waiting one long, long time. When you have 6 fatalities and then are still allowed to negotiate a $6800 fine down to $2200, why should Perini change anything?

And the unions are not without blame here either. Just try taking some disciplinary action like sending a guy home or banning him from the jobsite for safety violations and see how fast they are at the front door complaining!!

COMMONET: This is par for the course for the federal government - find problems only when they obviously exist and after the harm has been done. Same thing with the $50 billion pyramid scheme just uncovered. Finding it when they guy was starting it up is apparently too much to ask. Just be happy they didn't let it grow to $500 billion.

For more on this subject see, Is the Republican Party Dead? No, but the Wizard of Oz is alive and well. November 30, 2008 - 08:54 AM

 

Construction Site Safety: OSHA violations, another construction site backing over injury December 16, 2008 - 10:19 AM

 

Construction Site Safety: Preventing Falls July 03, 2008 - 11:33 AM by Brooks Schuelke.

 

Falls Prevalent At Construction Sites Posted by Jane Akre Friday, November 21, 2008 12:07 PM EST

 

Construction Site Safety – Trench boxes stop collapsing trenches from trapping workers November 22, 2008 - 08:59 AM

 

 


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