ADSC Safety Committee - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 52
About This Presentation
Title:

ADSC Safety Committee

Description:

none – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:48
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 53
Provided by: jameshu6
Category:
Tags: adsc | committee | iafd | safety

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ADSC Safety Committee


1
Creating An Effective Job Safety Analysis (JSA)
ADSC Safety Committee
 Pacific Center I 14180 Dallas Parkway Suite
510 Dallas, Texas 75254
2
Goals
  • Given the information and exercises in this
    workshop, you will be able to
  • Explain why JSAs are important
  • Recognize how the JSA can be a valuable planning,
    production, profit and safety tool.
  • Know the four step process and complete a JSA
  • Use the completed JSA on a daily basis to improve
    your projects operation

3
What Is Our Focus?
  • Drilled Shaft Installation
  • Anchor Micropile Installation
  • Grout Mixing Pumping

4
JSA Key Terms
  • Whats a Job?
  • Whats a Hazard?
  • Whats an Exposure?
  • What is Analysis?

5
What is a Job?
  • Any activity (mental, physical or both) that
    has been assigned to an employee as a
    responsibility and carries with it both positive
    and/or negative consequences based on the
    performance of that activity.

6
What is a Hazard?
  • An unsafe condition or practice that could cause
    injury, illness, or property damage and is
    preventable.

7
What is an Exposure?
  • When an employee enters a danger zone by
    virtue of their proximity to the hazard.

8
What is Analysis?
  • The breaking down of a job into its component
    steps and then evaluating of each step, looking
    for hazards. Each hazard is then corrected or a
    method of worker protection is identified and
    made a standard of operation.

9
What is a JSA?
  • Job Safety Analysis is a Pro-Active tool used to
    prevent unwanted events
  • It is a process used to determine hazards
    associated with an activity . . .
  • And then create basic procedures to prevent the
    unwanted events

10
JSA Purpose
  • Effective JSAs help the employer recognize and
    control hazards and exposures in the workplace.

11
4 Steps of a JSA
  • Identify the job to be analyzed
  • Separate the job into its basic steps
  • Identify the hazards associated with each step
  • Create a control of each hazard

12
Format
  • Some type of form or checklist or perhaps a
    combination of the two
  • Prompts the writer of the JSA
  • Keep it simple, but realistic (i.e. Be safe or
    Be Careful is not enough)

13
(No Transcript)
14
(No Transcript)
15
(No Transcript)
16
1. Identify The Job To Be Analyzed
  • Install Drilled Shafts, Micropiles or Anchors,
    Grout Mixing Pumping

17
2. Separate The Job Into Its Basic Steps
  • Mobilize Drill Rig To Site
  • Assemble Drill Rig
  • Drill Shaft
  • Insert Casing
  • Add Slurry?
  • Install Rebar Cage
  • Pour Concrete (Free Fall Or Tremie?)
  • Set up Batch Plant or Mixer Pump
  • Make Bench for Tieback Rig
  • Drill Anchor or Tieback
  • Mix Pump Grout
  • Install Anchor Head, Wedge Plates or Waler

18
3. Identify The Hazards Associated With Each Step
  • INJURY OR DEATH TO EMPLOYEES
  • DAMAGE TO EQUIPMENT
  • DAMAGE OR INJURY TO THE PUBLIC

19
Types of Hazards
  • Ergonomic
  • High Duration
  • High Force
  • Posture
  • High Frequency
  • Point of Operation
  • Mechanical Pressure
  • Vibration
  • Environmental Exposure

20
Types of Hazards
  • Physical
  • Pressure
  • Increased pressure in hydraulic and pneumatic
    systems
  • Mechanical
  • Pinch points, sharp points and edges, weight,
    rotating parts, stability, ejected parts and
    materials, impact
  • Flammability/Fire
  • In order for combustion to take place, the fuel
    and oxidizer must be present in gaseous form

21
Hoisting Reinforcing Steel Cage
  • Hoisting of rebar cages may require engineered
    lift points and specialized rigging for safe
    handling
  • Multiple crane lifts are not uncommon
  • Planning and training is key to a safe lift

22
Types of Hazards
  • Physical / Chemical
  • Explosive
  • Explosions result in large amounts of gas, heat,
    noise, light and over-pressure.
  • Electrical Contact
  • Inadequate insulation, broken electrical lines
    or equipment, no GFCI, lightning strike, static
    discharge etc.
  • Chemical Reactions
  • Chemical reactions can be violent, can cause
    explosions, dispersion of materials and emission
    of heat.

23
Underground Hazards
Call Before You Dig! Physically locate utility
prior to drilling Have emergency plan in
place 1-800-321-OSHA (OSHA Consultation Services)
24
Overhead Hazards
As with a crane, a minimum distance of 10 feet
must be maintained at all times between the drill
rig and energized overhead power lines Lines must
be de-energized, moved or otherwise rendered
harmless before any work activity closer than 10
feet can begin.
lt 50 kV 10 feet Clearance 200 kV 15
feet Clearance 350 kV 20 feet Clearance 500
kV 25 feet Clearance 650 kV 30
feet Clearance 800 kV 35 feet Clearance
25
Accident Types
  • Struck-by
  • A person is forcefully struck by an object. The
    force of contact is provided by the object.
  • Struck-against
  • A person forcefully strikes an object. The
    person provides the force or energy.
  • Contact-by
  • Contact by a substance or material that, by its
    very nature, is harmful and causes injury.

26
Accident Types
  • Contact-with
  • A person comes in contact with a harmful
    substance or material. The person initiates the
    contact.
  • Caught-on
  • A person or part of his/her clothing or
    equipment is caught on an object that is either
    moving or stationary. This may cause the person
    to lose his/her balance and fall, be pulled into
    a machine, or suffer some other harm.
  • Caught-in
  • A person or part of him/her is trapped, or
    otherwise caught in an opening or enclosure.

27
Barricading of the equipment to protect untrained
employees from entering the drilled shaft
installation workspace
28
Down Hole Entry
Different type of personnel hoist or ladder for
access and egress of the drilled shaft
Inside a correctly cased shaft
29
Accident Types
  • Caught-between
  • A person is crushed, pinched or otherwise caught
    between a moving and a stationary object, or
    between two moving objects.
  • Fall-to-surface
  • A person slips or trips and falls to the surface
    he/she is standing or walking on.
  • Fall-to-below
  • A person slips or trips and falls to a level
    below the one he/she was walking or standing on.

30
Crushing / Caught-Between
31
Caught Between
32
Potential Fall Hazards
Shafts 30 inches or greater in diameter and 6
feet or greater in depth require some form of
fall protection at the surface of the shaft
33
Accident Types
  • Over-exertion
  • A person over-extends or strains himself/herself
    while performing work.
  • Bodily reaction
  • Caused solely from stress imposed by free
    movement of the body or assumption of a strained
    or unnatural body position. A leading source of
    injury.
  • Over-exposure
  • Over a period of time, a person is exposed to
    harmful energy (noise, heat), lack of energy
    (cold), or substances (toxic chemicals/atmospheres
    ).

34
Over-Exposure?
35
Drilled Shafts
36
Limited Access Public Protection
37
Multiple Activities
Drilling Shafts Driving Casing Extracting
Casing Concrete Pumping
38
Auxiliary Equipment
Vibratory hammer used to insert casing prior to
drilling the shaft
Drilled shafts often require the use of auxiliary
equipment to assist in the shafts completion
Installing concrete via a tremie pipe and
concrete pump
39
Anchors and Micropiles
40
Grout Mixing Pumping
41
4. Create A Control Of Each Hazard
  • The Hierarchy of Controls
  • Engineering controls
  • Management controls
  • Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)

42
Engineering Controls
  • Consist of substitution, isolation, ventilation,
    and equipment modification.
  • These controls focus on the source of the hazard,
    unlike other types of controls that generally
    focus on the employee exposed to the hazard.
  • The basic concept behind engineering controls is
    that, to the extent feasible, the work
    environment and the job itself should be designed
    to eliminate hazards or reduce exposure to
    hazards

43
Management Controls
  • Management controls may result in a reduction of
    exposure through such methods as changing work
    habits, improving sanitation and hygiene
    practices, or making other changes in the way the
    employee performs the job.

44
Equipment Inspections
An ounce of prevention . . .
45
Personal Protective Equipment
  • When exposure to hazards cannot be engineered
    completely out of normal operations or
    maintenance work, and when safe work practices
    and administrative controls cannot provide
    sufficient additional protection from exposure,
    personal protective clothing and/or equipment may
    be required.

46
Personal Protective Equipment
  • Hard Hats
  • Safety Glasses
  • Reflective Vests
  • Full Body Harness Lanyard
  • Handrail System
  • Gloves

47
JOB SAFETY ANALYSIS WORKSHEET Project Name
Drillers Retirement Home Date 02-03-07 Project
Description Drilled Shafts
48
Now What?
  • Once the JSA is complete, what do you do with it?

49
JSA
  • The JSA is a tool to increase job quality,
    productivity and safety.
  • To be effective it should be completed near the
    end of the current day, and presented before the
    start of work the next day.

50
Who Should Attend?
  • All employees should attend the JSA meeting prior
    to the start of each shift.
  • Include your subcontractor, or have them perform
    their own.
  • The Supervisor should present the JSA information
    initially.
  • As time passes on the project, the JSA may be
    presented by the Forman (Supervisor in
    attendance) or perhaps a key person in the crew.

51
What Are The Benefits?
  • If all employees attend, then they all have an
    opportunity to make the project a better place to
    work.
  • A JSA gives your employees awareness, direction,
    and allows involvement as to the activities and
    hazards that will be faced that day.
  • You will have a safer, more productive job with
    better quality control!

52
Any Questions
?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com