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To
some of the industrys hardcore safety adherents, dwelling
too much on what happens after an accident is almost blasphemy.
With contractors claiming zero tolerance for safety risks
and projects visibly promoting their number of "accident
free" days, the idea of preparing for an accident seems
to undermine that iron-clad commitment to safety. "Id
rather talk about prevention," was the reply we received
to some of our questions about rescue preparedness.
Yet jobsite accidents, injuries
and deaths remain a fact of construction life, with annual
U.S. fatality numbers stubbornly exceeding 1,000 since 1994.
Omitting the issue of rescue training and preparedness leaves
an important component of the safety package unfinished.
Simply dialing 9-1-1 isnt
enough. Knowing when and how to attempt a rescue is the first
step. Providing professionalsand site employeeswith
critical lifesaving information and tools is next. And understanding
what rescuers and first-responders can and cant do is
the remaining leg of the triangle. Construction firms are
often lax in rescue coordination with firefighters, police
and emergency service technicians. That must change.
This special report begins with
a case study of a complex rescue and recovery last year at
the site of a collapsed hotel garage in Atlantic City, N.J.
The operation was harrowing but seamlessly blended the skill
and determination of firefighters, police, construction workers
and engineers.
The report continues with a look
at rescue risks and real situations faced in some of constructions
most hazardous worksites, from high wires to deep trenches.
In the cover photo, the worker desperately trapped by a trench
cave-in was lucky. He was saved and recovered.
The lack of federal standards
on "prompt rescue" and the private sectors
effort to fill that gap are discussed later in the report,
as is a look at the array of large and small tools available
to the construction workplace to help participants reach victims
and limit injuries to workers and rescuers. This report can
help guide employers, unions, workers and rescue professionals
toward talking about and then preparing to do what is bestjust
in case.
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