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Loss Control Overviews Online OVERHEAD
HAZARDS |
Revised March 1, 2004
Safety professionals find that the largest percentage of accidents can be attributed to overhead hazards. Typical examples are improperly felled trees, lodged or leaning trees, dead limbs and snags, broken branches, overhead grapple loads, stems falling off trailers, and falling implements and attachments caused by sudden loss of hydraulic pressure. The two main locations where woods workers are exposed to overhead hazards are at the landing and tree felling sites.
Accidents can be minimized by protecting workers with fully enclosed equipment cabs, separated work zones with buffers, proper loading and unbinding procedures, and achieving zero energy state during maintenance. Many of the high hazard overhead situations, however, can be eliminated through one technique: worker awareness. It is usually exposed, on-the-ground workers who are at greatest risk and, frequently, are in those situations because of their actions.
Employers who train and promote a personal HEADS - UP! attitude have fewer employee injuries.
Consider the following training points:
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Forest Resources Association Inc. |