March-April 2005

  • 1
  • 2

Shore Up Your Profit Potential

Choose proper trench support for job site safety and OSHA compliance—and for an often-overlooked productivity payoff that saves you money.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Carol Wasson

Comments

When discussing proper trench support—safety and OSHA compliance are at the forefront. After all, no one wants to see an employee or co-worker injured or killed in a cave-in. No one wants to be smacked with fines, penalties, or insurance claims. No one wants a job site to become a disaster area. Yet even today, experts estimate that up to 70% of all trenching sites do not meet OSHA regulations. Why? It’s human nature at play.

Many think cave-ins can’t happen to them—not for the few minutes or hours that the crew is in an unsupported or unsloped excavation. It’s simply a matter of knowing good dirt from bad dirt, some say.

Many tempt fate year after year, believing that in their 10 or 20 years in the business, they’ve never put anyone in harm’s way. Think of this: Just because you don’t crash every time you drive your car, is that a reason not to wear a seat belt? It only takes once, you know. Until that time it’s thought that bad things don’t happen. So apathy takes over.

Unfortunately, a number of folks feel that it’s easier, faster, and cheaper to cut corners. But truth be known, say experts, poor excavation practices cost more too—adding 8% or more to trenching costs. This added expense often stems from utility line damage when excavations fail and increased construction, insurance, and liability costs. Certainly the big payoff and profit potential lies in being compliant. There’s an often-overlooked productivity factor delivered by proper trench support methods—one that reduces your costs by helping your crew work more efficiently and cost-effectively.

Just the Hard Facts
Bottom line, productivity is higher when workers know they are safe. Unprotected laborers work slowly as they constantly look over their shoulders at unstable excavation walls, and for good reason: In the US, more than 400 workers die every year and 6,400 are seriously injured while trenching. A 2004 Centers for Disease Control (CDC) report on trenching fatalities concludes that deaths from trench cave-ins are still a serious problem despite the fact that compliance with OSHA standards (OSHA 29 CFR, Part 1926, Subpart P, effective March 1990) would prevent these deaths. CDC data show the following:

  • Of the fatalities, 256 (47%) occurred among employees of companies with fewer than 10 workers, and 381 (70%) occurred in companies with fewer than 50 workers.
  • The industries most frequently reporting fatalities were those involved in excavation work, followed by water, sewer, pipeline, and communications and power-line construction.
  • A total of 507 (94%) workers killed were employed in private industry, and 31 (5%) of those killed were local government workers.
  • Although excavation and trenching fatalities occurred in various occupations, the largest proportion of deaths occurred among construction laborers. Cave-ins accounted for 76% of fatalities.

Advertisement

“Most cave-ins result from a superficial inspection of a site that indicated no apparent chance of a trench collapse,” says David Dow, president of Memphis, TN–based TrenchSafety and Supply Inc., a company that trains excavation workers in trench safety and also sells and rents shoring and shielding equipment. “In fact, the vast majority of cave-ins actually occur in clay-based soils [where wall failures are not anticipated], as opposed to sandy conditions where failures normally would be indicated. Also, most cave-ins happen in trenches between 5 and 15 feet deep, where managers and workers falsely believe they can quickly escape if a trench wall collapses,” says Dow, adding that with the exception of working in stable rock (which is rare), every trench is going to collapse. “It’s just a question of timing. Some will collapse immediately while others will take longer. The good news is that when done properly, trench work can be safe,” he says.

As to 5- to 20-foot-deep trenches, OSHA requires one of three alternatives in providing a safe working environment for trench workers: sloping and benching, shoring and sheeting, or shielding. Sloping and benching requires the cutting back of trench walls to an angle that will ensure no collapse into the work area. Shoring and sheeting devices pre-load the trench walls and provide a positive restraint to soil movement, thus preventing cave-in hazards. Shielding devices are not designed to prevent trench wall collapse, but rather “shield” workers should a cave-in occur.

Next Page >
  • 1
  • 2

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!