My trip to the ER


mossyhorn

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Glad you are OK and it wasn't worse. I have seen pics of people impaled from a fall like that. You got lucky...very lucky.

Did this happen at work? Are you covered for the fall?

There are OSHA rules regarding working at heights above 8'. It requires a harness and fall arrestor.

I know some situations, there is nothing to tie off to. This might have been one of them. I work at ridiculous heights on occasion and one thing I take seriously is fall protection.

So should you... at work or in the tree stand.

Again...glad you were not injured worse that what it is.

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Guest TennesseeTurkey
Glad you are OK and it wasn't worse. I have seen pics of people impaled from a fall like that. You got lucky...very lucky.

Did this happen at work? Are you covered for the fall?

There are OSHA rules regarding working at heights above 8'. It requires a harness and fall arrestor.

I know some situations, there is nothing to tie off to. This might have been one of them. I work at ridiculous heights on occasion and one thing I take seriously is fall protection.

So should you... at work or in the tree stand.

Again...glad you were not injured worse that what it is.

No it dosent unless you are on a roof, ladders you can go up to 40' without any fall protection as long as you dont set foot off of the ladder

going back tomorrow...well if we done get the snow

what do you do work wise?

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No it dosent unless you are on a roof, ladders you can go up to 40' without any fall protection as long as you dont set foot off of the ladder

what do you do work wise?

Not so Will.

I took the OSHA 30 Hour course and that is what is they specify. Look it up. Will, we work on straight ladders also from time to time and I have worked 380' above ground on bridges all over NYC. Safety inspectors from OSHA have cited Sheetrock tapers on scaffolds(inside apartments!) for not having fall protection above 6'. OSHA is the enforcement arm of NIOSH. They will investigate if someone is taken off the job in a ambulance.

Even on a Baker Scaffold, it requires railings below 6' or a full body harness above 8', belts alone are no good, need a full harness. I work in the construction capital of the world...NYC. I know it sounds ridiculous, and some of the rules are. Sometimes there is no place to tie off to. But they want you to have a belt on anyway. The responsibility is on the worker and the customer wants the workers to know what the rules are so they are immune from lawsuits if someone gets hurt by not wearing fall protection. EVEN in a 8x4 man lift(scissor lift) you need to wear a harness. But if they catch us, and NYC is under the same OSHA as anywhere else in the country, workers will be fired and fined depending on how many offenses have been committed

Safety is something that should not be compromised.

Be careful at work today, you are expected home tonight.

No job is so important, no service is that urgent. That a worker cannot take the time to do the job safely.

Mossyhorn...sorry about the Hijack. Glad you are OK.

If you need a full body harness, I'll see if I can get you one and a lanyard when I get back to work and I'll send it to you.

Please do not take this a finger waving or scolding...I am trying to teach about what I KNOW from the classes I took on job safety.

Been doing it 25 years and I want you to go home the same way you came to work...in one piece.

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Guest TennesseeTurkey
Not so Will.

I took the OSHA 30 Hour course and that is what is they specify. Look it up. Will, we work on straight ladders also from time to time and I have worked 380' above ground on bridges all over NYC. Safety inspectors from OSHA have cited Sheetrock tapers on scaffolds(inside apartments!) for not having fall protection above 6'. OSHA is the enforcement arm of NIOSH. They will investigate if someone is taken off the job in a ambulance.

Even on a Baker Scaffold, it requires railings below 6' or a full body harness above 8', belts alone are no good, need a full harness. I work in the construction capital of the world...NYC. I know it sounds ridiculous, and some of the rules are. Sometimes there is no place to tie off to. But they want you to have a belt on anyway. The responsibility is on the worker and the customer wants the workers to know what the rules are so they are immune from lawsuits if someone gets hurt by not wearing fall protection. EVEN in a 8x4 man lift(scissor lift) you need to wear a harness. But if they catch us, and NYC is under the same OSHA as anywhere else in the country, workers will be fired and fined depending on how many offenses have been committed

Safety is something that should not be compromised.

Be careful at work today, you are expected home tonight.

No job is so important, no service is that urgent. That a worker cannot take the time to do the job safely.

Mossyhorn...sorry about the Hijack. Glad you are OK.

If you need a full body harness, I'll see if I can get you one and a lanyard when I get back to work and I'll send it to you.

Please do not take this a finger waving or scolding...I am trying to teach about what I KNOW from the classes I took on job safety.

Been doing it 25 years and I want you to go home the same way you came to work...in one piece.

O well thats what the trainer from Dish Network told us I was going on his word lol.... I bow to my sensei, Anthony :D

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