Archive for January, 2010

Photographs That Support Our Safety Message

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

As per the eLCOSH Use Policy – this is a screenshot of the browse page at CPWR — The Center for Construction Research & Training, elcosh.org/images.

One of the difficulties faced by safety professionals is finding the right image to show during training and other times—whenever conveying a safety message to others.  I’ve been consciously building a photo gallery of the “good, bad and the ugly” for over 30 years.  My early OSHA compliance photos got left in the Federal files and anyway, they suffered from the media of their day (Kodak Instamatic or Polaroids).

When I switched to digital I began my current collection which now suffers from my lack of time to organize it and digitally enhance or correct some images.  Even though I’ve got enough of my own shots to support this website (although I still waste time finding the right one) I’m always on the lookout for others’ helpful collections.  Voila.

Just this month The Center for Construction Research and Training (eLCOSH) added a free-of-charge image library to their already helpful website.  It provides high resolution, downloadable photos of hazards on construction sites.  Each photo has been fully described and the site is well organized and searchable by key words.  Find it at www.elcoshimages.org.

Be sure to read the “Use Policy” before you download.  Thanks, eLCOSH, and thanks to all the contributing photographers.

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Low Bid = High Risk?

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

 

Forty feet up or more. (All photos by Jan Thomas)

Forty feet up or more. (All photos by Jan Thomas)

I’ve dipped into my photo collection to start out this year’s blogging.  It’s been several years since I took this series of pictures from a public street near Circle Safety’s Richmond offices. 

Look closely… Two guys, on an aluminum work board (not a two-point suspended scaffold), one with a hard hat and PFAS in use, the other getting a good suntan.  The horizontal white lines you see are ropes strung through small diameter PVC pipe, one on each side of the work board.  Acting or at least looking like guardrails?  Look closer and you’ll see more problems.

The biggest problem could be missed but I believe is the root cause of the observed hazards – these guys are working for the company that won the low bid to do cleaning and painting of this tower.  I don’t know for sure but I’ll bet they were required to provide their own equipment.

I want to say right now that although I do have my “hazard radar” turned on almost all the time, I very rarely make a referral of an unsafe condition to OSHA.  It has to be a true imminent danger situation which I believed this to be.

(In a later blog I would like to speak to the issue of a “duty to respond.”  I have spoken with many professions including enforcement officers, emergency responders and public officials who have admitted to the dilemma of not always knowing if they should ignore something or get involved.) 

It wasn’t my jobsite or my client, but on this day I decided that I had to save two lives.  I took the photos and contacted my local VOSH office. Within half an hour, these lucky workers were on the ground talking to a VOSH inspector. 

Rock climbing equipment attached to wire rope….

Rock climbing equipment attached to wire rope….

I say “lucky” because the photo below is a close-up of their sole anchor point. 

What do you think?

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Please Note: Analysis and opinions expressed are specific to the current discussion only. Different facts, changes in standards and codes, or other circumstances may lead to different results.