Aerial Lift Safety: Hazard Alert
Aerial Lift Safety: Hazard Alert
Aerial Lift Safety: Hazard Alert
Hazard Alert
About 26 construction workers die each year from using aerial lifts. More than half of the deaths involve boom-supported lifts, such as bucket trucks and cherry pickers; most of the other deaths involve scissor lifts. Electrocutions, falls, and tipovers cause most of the deaths. Other causes include being caught between the lift bucket or guardrail and object (such as steel beams or joists) and being struck by falling objects. (A worker can also be catapulted out of a bucket, if the boom or bucket is struck by something.) Most of the workers killed are electrical workers, laborers, painters, ironworkers, or carpenters.
*OSHA says a qualified person...by extensive knowledge, training, and experience can...solve...problems related to the subject matter.... A competent person is...capable of identifying existing and predictable hazards...and has authorization to take prompt measures to eliminate them.
To prevent tipovers: Check the manufacturers instructions. Do not drive with the lift platform elevated (unless the manufacturer says thats OK). Do not exceed vertical or horizontal reach limits or the specified load-capacity of the lift. On an elevated scissor lift, avoid too much pushing or pulling.
Training
OSHA says a qualified person must train all users. The training must include: Any electrical, fall, and falling-object hazards. Procedures for dealing with hazards. How to operate the lift correctly (including maximum intended load and load capacity). The user must show he/she knows how to use the lift. Manufacturer requirements. If the hazards change, the type of aerial lift changes, or a worker is not operating a lift properly, workers must be retrained.
2004, The Center to Protect Workers Rights. All rights reserved. CPWR is a research, development, and training arm of the Building and Construction Trades Dept., AFL-CIO: CPWR, Suite 1000, 8484 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20910. (Edward C. Sullivan is president of the Building and Construction Trades Dept. and of CPWR and Sean McGarvey is secretary treasurer.) Production of this card was supported by grant 1U54OH008307 from the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health and grants U45- ES09764 and U45-ES06185 from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. The contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official (8/4/05) views of NIOSH or NIEHS.