Archive for the ‘Underground Network Incidents’ Category

September 22

Fatal Electrocution in Port Orange, FL Under OSHA Investigation

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Arc Flash/Shock Safety, Electric Shock Incidents, Electric Utility Incidents, OSHA Issues, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

 An employee of an electrical contracting company was fatally electrocuted while working on buried electrical piping. on the north side of the business complex, Surmaczewicz said. The man was taken to Halifax Hospital in Port Orange, where he died at 5:51 p.m., he said. The victim was working with another worker when he touched a [...]

September 18

PG&E Fined $176K by CalOSHA for Electrical Fatality

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Electric Utility Incidents, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

Not mincing words, CalOSHA fined PG&E $176K in a recent transformer incident leading to the fatality to a 26 year old electrical worker in a vault. Read the news article citing the press release. Read San Jose Mercury News Article. Read SF Chronicle Article.

September 18

PG&E Fined $176,000 over Utility Worker’s Fatal Electrocution

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Arc Flash Fines, Electric Shock Incidents, Electric Utility Incidents, OSHA Fines for Arc Flash Incident, OSHA Fines for Electrical Safety, OSHA Issues, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

The California Department of Industrial Relations has levied a $176,000 fine on Pacific Gas & Electric following a review of a Cal-OSHA report that alleged lax enforcement of safety rules to protect employees following the electrocution death of a PG&E utility worker.  The worker was upgrading a transformer in a vault that contained 12,000-volt power lines.  [...]

July 1

Electrocution of Electrician Today: Prevented by a Faceshield?

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Electric Utility Incidents, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

A Hoschton, Ga., electrician died today after he was struck in the face by a live wire in front of a Martinez residence.

Workmen survey the scene Thursday after a co-worker was shocked by electricity. William Bret Ward, 45, was hit in the forehead by a live wire at about 10:30 a.m. while working on a ground transformer at a home on the 3900 block of Braddock Street, Columbia County Coroner Vernon Collins said.

“(He) was pulling a wire into it and apparently his head came in contact with the current, and it electrocuted him,” Collins said.

Ward, a worker with Utility Lines Construction Services Inc., was wearing protective gloves and rubber sleeves when the wire hit him, Collins said.

Ward’s co-workers performed CPR on him until Martinez-Columbia Fire Rescue and EMS crews arrived at the scene.

“It was just too much for him,” Collins said.

Ward was pronounced dead at about 11:30 a.m. at Doctors Hospital.

May 27

Worker Hurt in “Manhole Explosion” Probable Arc Flash

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

Three primary causes for “manhole explosions” are 1. Ignition of combustible or flammable gases or dusts in the manhole 2. Arc Flash 3. A combination of the two. By law, gases are monitored and these explosions are fairly rare.  Arc flashes are more common when gases are being monitored.  Click here to read the report.

March 29

PP&L Network worker burned in arc flash/transformer issue. Wrong PPE here would have been a fatality.

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Arc Flash/Shock Safety, Electric Utility Incidents, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

PP&L has been in arc rated clothing for years.  They, like most electric utilities in the US have a strong arc flash program in place.  In cotton clothing, this worker would likely have never lived.  The right stuff makes a difference but doesn’t always full protect. The NESC (National Electrical Safety Code) 2007 version requires utilities [...]

March 18

PG&E Worker Electrocuted in Vault in Bay Area

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Electric Shock Incidents, Electric Utility Incidents, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

These types of incidents are covered by CALOSHA and NESC. PG&E has a great safety and training program. The investigation will be swift. Read the article in the SF Chronicle online. Another article on same fatality. Another article, same fatality. Another article, same story. CalOSHA Confirms PG&E Death.

February 25

Probable Arc Flash Boston, MA NStar Workers. Two workers allegedly injured.

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Arc Flash/Shock Safety, Electric Utility Incidents, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

“Two NStar workers were hospitalized Friday morning after an overnight fire in a manhole at the corner of Summer and Otis Streets. Both men are at Mass General Hospital, but their conditions are not immediately known. NStar said the men were working in the manhole when an equipment failure sparked the fire. Both streets have been reopened.”

February 17

Probable arc flash incident ConEd in Brooklyn. Two reportedly injured

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Arc Flash/Shock Safety, Electric Utility Incidents, Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

ConEd has an exceptional arc flash PPE program. Two injured. One critical according to one report but not critical according to a ConEd report. Most like a manhole arc flash. Standers-by might think the person in the hole was worse off than reality. Arc flashes have substantial smoke which looks like serious burns but often [...]

February 13

Amazing photo of electrical transformer blast in front of a Radio Shack. No injuries.

Posted by Hugh Hoagland
Filed under Underground Network Incidents | No Comments

See the story in NY Mag