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TRENCH RESCUE

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INITIAL RESPONSE One Medic Unit One Truck Company One Rescue Squad/Extrication Unit LFRD ... Leaking natural gas lines Broken water or sewer lines Traffic movement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TRENCH RESCUE


1
  • TRENCH RESCUE

No need to click to advance, the show will
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2
INTRODUCTION
  • Each year, 1,100 workers are seriously injured
    and approximately 100 workers die in trenching
    and excavating related accidents.

3
TRENCH 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.

4
INITIAL 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

5
SPOTTING THE APPARATUS
  • Proximity to the trench - not closer than 250 ft.
  • Accessibility for other rescue vehicles - at
    least 100 ft. from trench

6
FIRST 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.

7
SIZE-UP
  • Establish ICS
  • Determine the Civilian in charge
  • Are there any witnesses ?
  • Now find out the facts
  • Identify any communication barriers

8
SIZE-UP
  • Identify hazards
  • Downed electrical wires
  • Leaking natural gas lines
  • Broken water or sewer lines
  • Traffic movement causing vibration
  • Crowd control

9
OUTER CIRCLE CHECK
  • Identify witnesses to incident.
  • Identify job foreman.
  • Begin to establish incident perimeter, 100 feet
    minimum.

10
INNER 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

11
INNER 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.

12
COMPLETE 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
13
VICTIMS 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

14
SOIL 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

15
TRENCH
  • 15 ft. deep or over 6 ft. wide

16
TYPES OF TRENCH ACCIDENTS
  • Spoil Pile Slide

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
17
Types of Trench Accidents
  • Slough - In
  • Slough Trench Lip

Slough In (Cave in) -most commonly occurs
to previously excavated material (primarily sand
and gravel mixtures)
18
Types of Trench Accidents
  • Side Wall Shear

Side Wall Shear -this commonly occurs in clay
type soils that are exposed to drying.
19
WALL 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

20
TYPES 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

21
SOIL 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.

22
Terms 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.

23
Terms
  • 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

24
Terms
  • 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.

25
REVIEW
  • 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

26
Do NOT trade a life for a body!!!
27
Lets see what you remember
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