On our plant visits we speak about the importance of workers following
their training, never skips steps, and too never make assumptions. Because a
failure of one those can easily lead to an incident. Sadly, here is a recent incident
where a worker failed to follow his training, skipped steps, and made an
assumption. He died as a result.
The
61-year-old male who was killed in an industrial accident one day during the
week of October 7, 2018 died after being pulled into a moving fan at a foundry
in the Midwest USA, according to the local County Medical Examiner's report.
The
report identified the man as (omitted man).
The
deceased worker was working on the rooftop of the foundry in a fan shack. He was found in a small steel shack, which
controlled ventilation for the building.
A
person on the scene told investigators the worker was supposed to have
"tagged out" after finishing his task, but didn't and was
"swallowed up" by the fan, according to the ME report.
Lockout-tagout
is a Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulation and safety
procedure to keep employees safe and make sure machines are properly turned off
so no one can put it back in service while it is being worked on.
Another
worker heard some commotion and found the worker. He shut down the unit and called 911 at 3:10
p.m.
The
medical cause of his death is still under investigation.
The
report doesn't state how long the deceased worked at the foundry.
The
report did not identify any negligence, but OSHA is still investigating.
We offer our sincere condolences to the deceased worker’s family,
friends, and coworkers.
It is unknown if the worker had performed this procedure beforehand.
Regardless, the news media article states that the worker failed to follow lock
out tag out. The Aluminium Plant Safety Blog has posted incidents where a
failure to properly follow lock out tag out or safe isolation procedures
resulted in workers being injured or killed. The Aluminium Times magazine had
an article about this topic. It can be downloaded here:
So what should the reader do with this post? It would be our sincere
hope that you will print it out and discuss it with your maintenance workers.
Explain to the workers what can go horribly wrong if they to follow their
training, skip steps, and/or make assumptions.
Please comment.
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