- Location
- Massachusetts
Guess Linemen must be exempt from OSHA?
Not exempt, just different.
OSHA rules apply to them but they are not the same OSHA rules that apply to those outside of the utilities.
Guess Linemen must be exempt from OSHA?
It is just the law, you decide to follow it or not. Define "less costly", are you including the possibel tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars OSHA fine? How about the average cost of a serious esurvivable electrical accident of $17.6M??
EC's are getting busted and fined by OSHA every day for working hot, times are changing.
The older I get, the older I want to get.
Have you seen the PPE measures that Linemen take when working hot? They are certainly as safe as can be.
I feel the same way.
Also the training that goes with using all the PPE the POCO uses that says alot, for safety. Cause if its primary or secondary voltage you can never let your gaurd down, one small mistake could be your last.
Okay, so what's your take on this thread so far? Who do you side with? The paranoid or the reckless?i only do hot work. thats why this plant hired me: because i'm qualified to do it. qualified meaning i know how to do it safely and efficiently.
Okay, so what's your take on this thread so far? Who do you side with? The paranoid or the reckless?
vegasmark said:IMO its up to the electrician doing the work to take into account all of the conditions in effect to do the work safely. If you feel comfortable and confident that you can change out a service hot, there's nothing reckless about it.
I guess I didn't answer your question. If I had to coordinate with a POCO I would set the time and then I would bill them for any extra time you spend waiting. Their rules will change quickly when they start paying for your time.
I actually told the POCO here that I would do that the next time I had to wait for them. They send they have paid out before to other EC's.
Maybe I am a bit of a risk taker. Okay, Chris Kennedy has been in the car with me driving so I better be straight. I am a big risk taker :grin:
At least Chris was up front and could see what you were aiming at or trying to miss.:grin:
Reminds me of a guy I met once that drove into a high security area at a power plant to look around, despite all the bright yellow warning signs saying " Authorized Personal Only" that were posted.
Am I the only one here that is not familiar with back charging the utility for wait time? I have waited for hours, literally 2, 3, or more sometimes. They would laugh if I even brought up the subject. I am better off to call for an emergency disconnect than to schedule a shutdown. Charging the utility isn't even an option around here. Wish it was.
No you're not. I've not heard of that either.
Called POCO out for one of the few times I have in many years just last week. 1 hour late for the disconnect, 7 hours late for the reconnect.
When technician finally arrived he says, "sorry I'm late, as he wiped sleep from his eyes, you should have mentioned customer reserve oxygen tank low on your reconnect request". You gotta luv it. :roll:
Wow, you haven't been paying attention if you haven't seen lineman let their guard down around the secondaries (or else your linemen are different). I had a call where the contractor never terminated the service entrance cable. It was just touching the lugs. Called Dominion to pull the meter. Lineman showed up and just grabbed the 4/0 in the panel and pulled it out (barehanded) and said "Yeah, that's loose". Just one of many stories. At least I have a healthy respect and wear my PPE whenever I work Hot.
Mark
You have to charge more because the power co may show up later than yourself.
If you have to wait for the utility to disconnect you will need to cover all the waiting time, and charge the customer.