zog
Senior Member
- Location
- Charlotte, NC
I knew that they are required to provide it but are they required to pay for it or can they make it available but require us to pay?
They are required to pay for it.
I knew that they are required to provide it but are they required to pay for it or can they make it available but require us to pay?
Do you consider trouble shooting equipment, working in the power panels with power on to be working hot? To me that is normal and safe work for trained Maintenance Electricians.
Sorry, electrical hazards don't care what your job is or what training you have you need to evaluate the hazard level and wear the right PPE.
And what would be the right PPE for trouble shooting equipment and working in power panels with power on?
So as an industrial maintenance electrician, how do I make my employer understand electrical safety? I gave my boss a copy of 70E about three months ago (I knew he was in the process of re-writing all of the company's safety procedures), a week later he returned it and said, "could you go through this and write down all of the rules we have to follow, I don't have time to go through the whole thing."
My reply was that we are required to follow the whole thing, to which I just got a :-?.
I just came back from vacation yesterday to a stack of safety handouts on my desk. Eight pages about proper lifting, six pages about MSDS and another 20 or so about random items. I have to sign a "proof of receipt" report for every single page. Care to guess how many regarding electrical safety?
I think that the situation a maintenance elec is in is unique, at least it is at my employer and I'm sure there are others out there exactly the same:
1. I cannot convince my co-workers or superiors that hot work is unacceptable.
2. Although I may not be "officially punished" for shutting a production machine down for maintenance, I can guarantee you that I will be looked upon less favorably by my superiors.
3. I cannot afford to buy ALL of the neccessary PPE to work the equipment hot yet they will not purchase it for me/us. As far as they are concerned, a good pair of welding gloves is sufficient. I have purchased, out of my own pocket, voltage rated gloves and a FR jacket which I wear if neccessary.
4. I GUARANTEE you that if I was ever injured in an electrical accident, it would be looked at as my fault.
Do I have a choice, to work hot? Yes. Is it a choice that is easy as black and white? No.
We have untrained machine operators in MCC's all the time, resetting starters and other things of that nature. They are told to "do what you gotta do" to keep the machine running. They have no concept of what can happen, yet are completely willing to stick their hands and anything else in a panel with no regard. It's frustrating as heck but I have tried many times to stop people and have been told "I've been shocked before, it's no big deal."
What does one have to do to get the point across?
Depends on the available fault current, cleariing time if the OCPD, voltage, type of equipment, etc....
A analysis is required to be done on your electrical equipment and labeled with the hazards levels or PPE required and your people need training,
Based on the question you asked here, you are not "qualified" per the NFPA 7)E or OSHA to be working on any electrical equipment.
I'm sure glad my Employer never found out that I wasn't qualified, or the other 300 IBEW electricians.
I called FPL to ask for an outage to connect a Xfer switch at a gas station. The owner wanted me to do it at night so that he would not have to shut his business down. Since it would only take ma about an hour, I asked if the trouble truck couldn't pull the cutouts and then come back later to turn them back on. FPL said their trouble truck might have to go on another call. I said no problem, I'll just run the gas station on the generator if that happens. They said no! I would have to pay them $1150 to call a crew out to do this at night. Greedy POCO. We did it during daytime for free.
One might think something as simple as area lighting in a refinery might not be a big deal right? Actual story...
JE has been on unit wide area lighting project for some time now...at end of day he calls down to "tool buddy" to open breaker and lockout.( same breaker he had operated for task many times prior ) JE waits for thumbs up( only type 1 lockout required at the time) JE recieves thumbs up, kneels down on steel catwalk to reach hand into open 2" tee, and without physical verification of open circuit, reaches hand into conduit body to pull out conductors to tie in new lighting conductors. the lighting was 480, the unit was older, the sun was hot, and he was ready to go. This was the last wire he ever touched. The conductor insulation was in poor shape, and the tee was in an akward location. He left behind a wife and 4 kids for production's sake. Totally unacceptable. The refinery moves on...while many mourn the loss of a father, husband, and friend. I know this story because I was the JE that took his place at the refinery. Complaicency is our #1 killer as electricians. If it is not safe, make it safe or dont do it.
I have encountered this issue on other threads recently ("me vs. customer", "split bolt connectors" etc.) and also in my own job.
It's almost like the elephant in the room. Obviously, and as we were all taught, standard practice is to deenergize any circuit you must work on.
However, in the real world in some cases, there are situations where hot work must be done. In my city (NY), I can't shut down 50 existing apartments to tap into the service bus. It is work approached with the utmost seriousness and caution and precautions-- by experienced people-- nonetheless dangerous.
A poster from L.A. (sorry I forget name) said in one of these threads that
he had no choice but to do it also. Some people from less populated areas said that they request a shutdown from the POCO and the homewner must wait if they have to. That's almost never done around here. Maybe it should be.
I realize this is a controversial topic. What do others think ?
I hook up all the upfits we do at shopping centers. We cant cut power off to the other businesses..
I dont like it but I wear linesman gloves rubber boots and am as careful as possible.
We dont worry about osha(we are under 5 employees) and I'm refering to a trough with 208 and 200a main. I just have to put my wires into the poco supplied polaras.
No I dont wear anything for arc flash in this situation.Maybe I should. I know it would be safer to kill power but in my case we are outside and able to make connections outside of trough and then fold into trough. All of the companys here that ive seen do it this way. It doesnt make it right just whats done.