Title: TRENCH RESCUE
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2INTRODUCTION
- Each year, 1,100 workers are seriously injured
and approximately 100 workers die in trenching
and excavating related accidents.
3TRENCH CRITERIA
- A trench is deeper than it is wide, but no more
than 15 wide at the bottom - Trenches over 4 requires shoring
- Spoil pile should be a minimum of 2 from edge.
4INITIAL RESPONSE
- EMS Duty Officer
- Montgomery County Police - Emergency Response
- Urban Search Rescue Team
- Utilities, as appropriate
- One Medic Unit
- One Truck Company
- One Rescue Squad/Extrication Unit
- LFRD Duty Officer
- DFRS Battalion Chief
5SPOTTING THE APPARATUS
- Proximity to the trench - not closer than 250 ft.
- Accessibility for other rescue vehicles - at
least 100 ft. from trench
6FIRST ARRIVING
- FIRST ARRIVING UNIT MUST
- Restrict entry to site
- Establish initial command
- Position unit no closer than 250 feet
- Establish off-site staging for other responding
apparatus - Eliminate sources of vibration, stop and shut
down construction equipment, stop traffic.
7SIZE-UP
- Establish ICS
- Determine the Civilian in charge
- Are there any witnesses ?
- Now find out the facts
- Identify any communication barriers
8SIZE-UP
- Identify hazards
- Downed electrical wires
- Leaking natural gas lines
- Broken water or sewer lines
- Traffic movement causing vibration
- Crowd control
9OUTER CIRCLE CHECK
- Identify witnesses to incident.
- Identify job foreman.
- Begin to establish incident perimeter, 100 feet
minimum.
10INNER CIRCLE CHECK
- Approach site from end of trench.
- Identify victim location using witnesses.
- Identify number of patients.
- Establish patient condition if possible.
- DO NOT ENTER TRENCH
11INNER CIRCLE CHECK
- How is the patient trapped?
- Totally buried, if so how deep
- Trapped by utilities
- Where ?
- Dont forget to consider the victims SURVIVAL
PROFILE - Direct non entrapped personnel out of the trench.
- Establish full command structure.
12COMPLETE PHYSICAL PERIMETER
0 feet
500 Feet
Staging
Rehab
- Hot Zone
- 100 feet
- Warm Zone
- 250 feet
- Cold Zone
- 500 feet
250 feet
IC
USAR Units
Personnel Staging
100 feet
Rescue
PIO
Trench
13VICTIMS SURVIVAL PROFILE
- Time is the biggest factor
- 8-10 min. to respond
- 10 min to set up
- 18 in 2500-3000 lbs
- Most trenches fail less than 12 ft. deep and 6
ft. wide
14SOIL EFFECTS
- IMPACT CRUSHES THE VICTIM
- Breaking Limbs
- Causing Internal Injuries
- Cuts And Abrasions
- TRAUMATIC ASPHYXIATION
- Soil Restricts Expansion Of The Victims Chest
- Blocks Airways
- Causing Suffocation
15TRENCH
- 15 ft. deep or over 6 ft. wide
16TYPES OF TRENCH ACCIDENTS
Spoil Pile Slide -occurs when improper
techniques are used and the excavated material is
NOT PLACED far enough away from the edge of the
excavation
UNSAFE SPOIL PILE
17Types of Trench Accidents
Slough In (Cave in) -most commonly occurs
to previously excavated material (primarily sand
and gravel mixtures)
18Types of Trench Accidents
Side Wall Shear -this commonly occurs in clay
type soils that are exposed to drying.
19WALL FAILURE in order
- 1. Disturbed soil
- 2. Intersecting trenches
- 3. Narrow right-of-way
- 4. Vibrations
- 5. Seepage of surface water
- 6. Drying of exposed walls
- 7. Inclined layers of soil
20TYPES OF SOIL THAT WILL FAIL in order
- Clay and or mud
- Sand
- Wet dirt probably silty clay
- Sand, gravel, and clay mix
- Rock
- Gravel
- Sand and gravel
21SOIL TYPES
- Type A - Most stable clay, silty clay, and
hardpan (resists penetration). No soil is Type A
if it is fissured, is subject to vibration of any
type, has previously been disturbed, or has
seeping water. - Type B - Medium stability silt, sandy loam,
medium clay and unstable dry rock previously
disturbed soils unless otherwise classified as
Type C soils that meet the requirements of Type
A soil but are fissured or subject to vibration. - Type C - Least stable gravel, loamy sand, soft
clay, submerged soil or dense, heavy unstable
rock, and soil from which water is freely
seeping. - Layered geological strata (where soils are
configured in layers) - The soil must be
classified on the basis of the soil
classification of the weakest soil layer. Each
layer may be classified individually if a more
stable layer lies below a less stable layer, i.e.
where a Type C soil rests on top of stable rock.
22Terms used in Trench Rescue
- Angle of repose - the greatest angle above the
horizontal plane at which loose soil will lie
without sliding. - Back fill - the refilling of a trench, or the
material use to refill a trench, or to fill a
void between two surfaces.
23Terms
- Back shoring - the shoring of a void as found
after a slough in, or may be used in a T
trench. - Cleats - temporary support for struts
- Kick out - accidental release or failure of shore
or strut. - Spoil pile - the material excavated from the
trench
24Terms
- Sheeting - 1 plywood
- Struts - the horizontal bracing between the
trench walls. - Uprights - the vertical supports, usually 2x8s
the depth of the trench. - Wedges - matched sets used to hold timber struts
in place.
25REVIEW
- Restrict Entry To Site
- Establish Initial Command
- Position Unit No Closer Than 250 Feet
- Establish Off-site Staging For Other Responding
Apparatus - Shut Apparatus and Equipment
- Stop all Traffic within 250 ft.
- DO NOT ENTER TRENCH
26Do NOT trade a life for a body!!!
27Lets see what you remember
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