Trenching - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Trenching

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Trenching Competent Person What Is a Competent Person? Identifies trench hazards Is authorized to take prompt corrective measures to eliminate hazards Is responsible ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Trenching


1
Trenching
  • Competent Person

2
What Is a Competent Person?
  • Identifies trench hazards
  • Is authorized to take prompt corrective measures
    to eliminate hazards
  • Is responsible for daily trenching inspection
  • Coordinates the emergency response plan
  • Is knowledgeable about soils, protective systems,
    and OSHA rules
  • Works with the professional engineer (PE), who
    designs protective systems

3
Session Objectives
  • As a competent person, you will be able to
  • Recognize trenching hazards
  • Understand protective systems for trenches
  • Understand hazards and preventive measures for
    activities associated with excavation

4
Trenching Fatalities and Injuries
  • Over 30 workers die, 1,000 injured per year
  • Common causes
  • No protective system
  • Failure to inspect
  • Unsafe spoil placement
  • Unsafe entry and exit

5
What Is an Excavation?What Is a Trench?
  • Excavationany hole or trench made by removing
    earth
  • Trencha narrow excavation that is deeper than it
    is wide, no greater than 15 feet wide at bottom
  • Trench walls will eventually fail

6
What Is a Cave-in?
  • Soil or rock falls into an excavation
  • Occurs when soil gravitates downward
  • Occurs when bottom third of a trench wall fails

Image Credit OSHA
7
Consequences of a Cave-in
  • Soil is dense and heavy
  • Cave-ins can entrap, bury, injure, or immobilize
  • Suffocationsoil prevents chest expansion
  • The worker becomes immobilized

8
Soil Classification
  • Soil is classified into different types
  • Each type requires a certain protective system
  • Competent person determines soil type

9
Soil Stability
  • Soil stability affected by
  • Grain sizesmall is better
  • Water saturation
  • Cohesivenesshow well soil sticks together
  • Unconfined compressive strength (UCS)how easily
    the soil will shear

10
Soil TypesType A
  • Type A is
  • The most stable soil type
  • Cohesive soil with UCS of 1.5 tons per square
    foot (tsf) or more
  • Cohesive soil that is predominantly clay
  • Not fissured or subject to vibrations
  • Not previously excavated or disturbed

11
Soil TypesType B
  • Type B is
  • Cohesive soil with UCS gt0.5 but lt1.5 tsf
  • Granular, cohesionless soil
  • Previously disturbed soils except those which
    would otherwise be classified asType C soil
  • An A soil that is fissured or subject to
    vibration
  • Dry rock that is not stable

12
Soil TypesType C
  • Type C is
  • Cohesive soil with UCS less than 0.5 tsf
  • Granular soil, including gravels
  • Sandy soil where sand is dominant
  • Submerged soil or seeping water
  • A downgrade of Type B

13
Soil Tests
  • Plasticity test
  • Dry strength test
  • Thumb penetration test
  • Pocket penetrometer

14
Signs of Soil Distress
  • Fissures or cracks in trench wall
  • Wall of trench slumps or falls
  • Soil bulges or heaves
  • Excavations edge sinks
  • Material ravels or trickles into excavation

Image Credit OSHA
15
Soil DistressConditions
  • Nearby vibrating machinery
  • Nearby moving, heavy loads
  • Seeping water or rain
  • Hot, dry weather

16
Trenching Hazards
  • Do you understand specific trenching hazards?
  • About cave-ins?
  • About hazards related to soil types?

17
Trench Protective Systems
  • Sloping and benching
  • Shoring
  • Shielding

Image Credit OSHA
18
Sloping and Benching
  • Slopingangling of walls at an incline
  • Benchingseries of steps to angle walls
  • Soil type determines angle of slope/bench
  • Type A (slope ratio .751)
  • Type B (ratio 11)
  • Type C (benching not permitted) (ratio 1.51)

Image Credit OSHA
19
Shoring
  • Uses support walls to prevent a cave-in
  • Usually built in place and designed by an
    engineer
  • Components
  • Uprights or sheeting
  • Wales
  • Cross braces

Image Credit OSHA
20
Shielding
  • Withstands forces of a cave-in and protects
    employees within
  • Permanent or portable
  • Trench boxes

21
ShieldingTrench Boxes
  • Often designed to stack
  • Not for height extension
  • Used with sloping and benching
  • No one permitted inside when moving

22
Whats Wrong Here?
  • Identify the hazards
  • Identify missing protective systemsand measures

Osha.gov
23
Trench Protective Systems
  • Do you understand trenching hazards?
  • The types of soil?
  • The types of protective systems?

24
Hazardous Atmospheres
  • At excavations near sewers, landfills, and other
    potentially hazardous atmospheres
  • Test atmosphere when deeper than 4 feet
  • Ventilate or use appropriate PPE
  • Maintain rescue and emergency equipment on-site

25
Falling Soil or Equipment
  • Loose rock/soil that may fall from an excavation
    face
  • Use scaling to remove loose soil
  • Use shoring or shields
  • Falling material or equipment
  • Keep material/equipment 2 feet from edge
  • Use retaining devices

26
Adjacent Structures
  • Excavations might endanger stability of
    buildings, walls, other structures
  • Sidewalks and pavements must not be undermined
    unless supported to prevent collapse onto
    excavation workers
  • Use shoring, bracing, or underpinning to ensure
    stability of nearby structures

27
Water Accumulation
  • Drowning hazard
  • Take precautions
  • Use special shoring or shielding system
  • Use a water removal system
  • Use a safety harness and lifeline

Image Credit OSHA
28
Entry and Exit
  • Trenches 4 feet deep or more must have
  • Entry and exit within 25 feet of worker
  • Entries and exits include
  • Ladders
  • Stairways
  • Sloped ramps

29
Other Trenching Issues
  • Mark all underground utilities
  • Stand away from lifting/ digging equipment
  • Use warning systemsor barricades
  • Use hard hats

30
Other Trenching Issues (cont.)
  • Use fall protection systems
  • No work above other workers
  • Monitor excavation work

31
Trench Inspections
  • Inspect before work starts, throughout shift, and
    after rainstorm
  • Inspect for
  • Evidence of possible cave-ins
  • Indications of failure of protective systems
  • Potential hazardous atmosphere
  • Remove workers if a hazardous condition exists

32
Key Points to Remember
  • Be aware of all the hazards associated with
    working around trenches
  • Cave-ins occur suddenly and can entrap, bury, or
    injure
  • Always use protection systems
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