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#1
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| 2007 bad year for safety do you agree? I was wondering if anyone else has seen an increase of serious injurys in 2007 My own opinion is that engineers,salesmen and saleswomen have lost the respect that machinist and fabricators have to work with dangerous equipment and excpect work to be done within insane timelines. Last year year These accidents happen just in my area. 1.) Former co-worker lost a finger in a press 2.) My present coworker lost a finger in a milling machine 3.) Fatal accident down the street was told he must get a press going was picked up in another press by a robot I know everyone is responsible for there own safety but some must agree when there is overwhelming stress put upon you by management and others the first thing you forget about is safety. |
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#2
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| Sorry for my bluntness, but I take extreme exception to the idea that personal responsibility these days can be avoided by just pointing a finger to 'management'. Cheers, Allan. |
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#3
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| Dibblah - I concur. This is indicative of the "hot coffee lawsuit" mentality. No accident is ever the worker's fault, it's all management. Yes, there are still worker safety issues caused by management not having the appropriate countermeasures in place, but that is the exception rather than the rule. Anytime in recent memory I've heard of an industrial accident, the core issue was the worker not following the proper safety protocol and subsequently suing the company. Like the guy who forgot something at work so he decided to jump the gate (so it didn't shut the system down) to the company's AS/RS warehouse, with 30 mph robotic forklifts inside. Got run down, family sued the place, won. I'm sorry, if you stick your hand in a running milling machine or fail to secure a press, you deserve to lose a finger. Some people are here only to serve as a warning to others. I've done some unsafe things and got burned, but I have the good sense to realize that I'm the idiot who did them. I have all the safety equipment I need to do my job properly. Using the safety equipment each and every time is ultimately up to the individual doing the job.
__________________ The Machinist's Chatroom http://machinechat.freehostia.com/ |
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#4
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| Hey don't take this the wrong way; I intend no offense, but I see the other side. And think I've been there. I wish I had your experience. I started in the environmental field, and am trying to switch careers. I have a year in trade school, manual machines. I agree that blatant mistakes by the worker are one thing, but in my experience there's more often than not bad management out there. And sometimes it *is* the managements fault. Your only choice when in a bad management situation is to leave once you wise up. If you don't, then it's your fault for staying. Here are some of the things that made me leave companies. I was doing OSHA 40 hazmat work (1994), before being properly trained. That's a minimum of 40 hours classtime before going on a nasty site. A year into the job, and after the training, we worked an acid spill that closed US1 for 16 hours. My company promoted a guy who they knew falsified his credentials including high school graduation... on this spill he ordered us to skip a manadory (40 CFR) safety meeting, and as a result, my half of the crew tightened all the overpack drums for shipping. This wouldn't have been a problem, except he failed to install the self relieving valves (85 dollars apiece) as recommended by chemtrek and instead wanted the drums loose. I was in the trailer counting the drums for manifest when they started expanding. One looked like a wok on top. I left shortly thereafter... the idiot who caused this mess was never reprimanded, but later fired for theft. The words of the company man were "While it was a significant emotional event, your life was never in danger." A couple of guys had to hold me back. Yeah right... it took the experts to fix it. In class A suits and bomb squad gear. No, I'm not kidding. We turned the spill over to the national response center. 'Bout got us fired too. I still shake when thinking about it. I worked for a major university (1997-99)... I was the first ever to come into Health and Safety with previous hazmat spill experience. I was impressed and fooled by all the nice equipment that they had. Explosimeter... don't need it. Not even for spilled av gas. Certainly not for unknown atmospheres. I got in trouble for insisting. Respiratory protection? We were wearing filters when supplied air was required. I got in trouble for insisting on medical monitoring after an unknown overexposure. Can you say Hazcom 1500?? The industrial hygenist couldn't field calibrate the pid (a basic hygiene and safety tool)... Heck, I had more training and experience with it than she did. The management considered me arrogant for helping people learn to use it. And don't get me started on Mercury... I saw a major spill not get reported... because reportable quanity refers to shipping, not us. You should have seen the contractors faces when he asked what our DEQ cleanup endpoint was, and our office told them we were not reporting it. The levels were so high when cleaning up that in 30 minutes you were done for the day... unless you were in completely enveloping protective gear (which of course we didn't have). Can you say "I'm gonna have to have something in writing!!" Of course, the readings I took were invalidated by the industrial hygenist as "incorrect" and way too high. I was later passed over for promotion, for people who were more qualified, yet had not yet taken any of the OSHA required training. Sure enough, one of these people on their first spill outing, made the mistake of sitting down in the area where all the little mercury droplets were... without protective gear. I don't know, more qualified than me, and stupid enough to sit in the area of ookie stuff I'm cleaning up?? I stayed far too long. On a side note, the architechture(sp) dept had a woodworking shop... they let anyone use it. A full scholarship young man (18) with a bright future was using a bandsaw. He had no shop training or experience whatsoever. Cut off all the fingers on his dominant hand, at the base of the palm. No reatachment possible. The universities position was that he was an adult and could make his own decisions... And, that OSHA was for employees, which students clearly are not, therefore not protected or constrained by OSHA either. I just didn't agree with that at all. I went back to a small enviromental company. They accepted a confined space job. This wasn't their bag of tea. I was the only person (out of about20) to be trained to supervisory levels, and nobody was trained as a competent person on the monitoring equipment for chlorine... which was part of the process. The lockout tagout was iffy at best, and they had one recovery system for two people in the hole. That system was a rope tied to an extendahoe... and not really a good choice... Of course I objected to the company doing the job, and was scheduled elsewhere that day. So. You can guess that the processes kicked on while somebody was in there, and double block and bleed was not used. Their only saving grace was there were no deaths due to chlorine fumes. And my coworker struggled out before he drowned. A couple of 4 inch pipes putting hot water on ya can ruin your day. I used some pretty choice language describing the idiocy, and had to leave before being fired. I haven't been back. WON'T go back. I've run out of close calls. My guess is that it is the same with machine shops. There will be both good, bad, and inbetween. I've heard of some bad. In classes (2006), half of the students in my group came from a shop that paid them to be there. They hated occasionally working in the back room of their shop pushing buttons, because they would get "coolant cough" and be sick for a couple days after. They consistantly asked for some solution to the problem, some increase in ventilation, or better enclosure of the machines. No dice. The airborne coolant would stay. So would the three day barf out your lungs cough. I don't know... How is that the employee's fault??? In Virginia, a foundry near where I live exploded. The union had for three years been trying to get the company to repair leaking high pressure gas lines to the furnaces. After the explosion, Osha found these lines terminated with things like two liter bottles wrapped in duct tape. Three workers died, and had it not been at shift change... it would have been many more. They got fined, like the largest Virginia fines ever, but there should have been people in jail. Again, what could they have done differently except strike? Ya gotta work! There was a Tool and Die shop I wanted to work at, and a classmate was working there. The roof leaked, they wouldn't fix it, and he said if you stepped in a puddle you could be electrocuted. They employed about 15 or so people. Just don't step in the water that's all over the floor. I hope that machining is not trading your health for money like the environmental field. But when you have a skill... you can take your ball and go home ![]() At least that's what I'm hoping. And I'm not so young and trusting anymore. I'll certainly believe that others will, like I have, for one reason or another work under bad conditions, and take risks when both underinformed and overpressured. And for a bad employer I'm certain if you start talking OSHA, you'd better move your tools close to the door. Glad that's off my chest... apologies in advance if offended. Mike Horne |
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#5
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| Safety is the responsibility of both management and the workers. Management needs to provide basic safety tools and equipment as well as well written policies on safety issues. In my shop I have clear expectations of my workers regarding safety, they get 3 written warnings when they break company policy, after the the 3rd warning they no longer work here. They get one written warning if they disable any safety interlock system, they do it a second time and they are gone. My workers also have an expectation of the company, we provide them with safety glasses, prescription safety glasses if needed, gloves for chemical mixing, msds sheets in an easy to find organized binder, good ventilation, etc. We also have an open door policy, if one of my workers comes up to me and says a piece of machinery is not functioning properly or safely, it is shut down until it is repaired. In fact I will give a written warning if I find out that a piece of machinery was being used after there was a problem with it and I was not notified. On the flip side we have to make money, but I don't want anyones injury or death on my head. So far no major injuries, and we are making the green stuff just fine |
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#6
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| JDenyer232 You are a good manager. I'm sure you respect that this machinery is dangerous stuff and operators deserve some respect. Let me ask you do you let your salesman rip into your operators because they made a ridiculous timeline and let the operators take the blame because they are lower guy on the totem pole and put them in a stressfull enviroment. Sure there are machinist and operators that need a kick in the rear to get them going but where not talking about them just your average good operator or machinist |
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#7
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And yes I do have respect for the machinery, it can do some awful things to you if you get careless |
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#8
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I used to work for an owner like this before We never knew that their was screaming mad customers or late shipments because salesmen promised them before talking to anyone or engineers trying to cover their butts with their mistakes or anything else that goes on in every shop all we knew is we had parts to make so we did it well the owner took care of those other matters. His catch phrase was no one gets hurt on my watch if any one bothers you send them my way. He meant that to if he saw a salesman talking to us while running a machine trying to hurry things along he would rip them a new one. I would kill to work for someone like that again. Talk about having some respect for us machinist he took alot on so we could work safe. He's retired now with a mansion right on the ocean he still got the job done while still creating a safe enviroment |
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#9
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| so far 2008 hasn t been any picnic i agree with the fact personal safety is an individual responsibility and as pointed previously we tend to overlook things or take shortcuts if we are under the gun , pressure from upper management can be great at times ,at all times where i work ! i get put under a heavy amount of pressure to assure the upper management the guys working below me are performing sometimes beyond reality other than that we are the a%^holes of the day , enough so that ive had it and my days are numbered there with that said ,those of us who take pride in our work and ourselves tend to try to save face and push ourselves beyond our limits and in our haste do have a higher chance of hurting ourselves , in one week i smashed the crap out of one finger and in one shot gashed open both of my thumbs while sliding a razor sharp plate across the table ,took two weeks of crazy glue to keep the one cut closed enough to start healing , i know this could have been avoided , i should have been paying more attention and shouldn t have been in such a rush but my mind was elsewhere (multi tasking) the guys on the floor should be left to do what they do ,they do not or were they hired to deal with salesman bs , thats the job for upper management to keep under their control **a machinist needs to be able to consentrate on the job at hand without distraction ** personally safety is our responsibility period , screw the company
__________________ A poet knows no boundary yet he is bound to the boundaries of ones own mind !! http://cnctoybox.org |
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#10
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| Implementing a good safety program is never easy, but in the long run the company saves money, and is more productive. One simple preventable injury can put a guy out for a week or more, how do ya pick up the slack then, drive the other guys even harder? I think not. An extra minute or two to double check your setup, or slow down a little to do something in a safe manner is time well spent, not only for the company but also for the workers. Now don't get me wrong, if I see one of my guys gabbing or walking around doing nothing when there is work to be done he will get his butt chewed. It is true that as a manager my guys respect me, and will go to great lengths to make sure that what needs to get done gets done, but our one rule is to do it once, do it right, and do it safe. Dertsap, I would leave that company ASAP, bad things can happen to people when they are rushed to get it done. There is a thread on this forum somewhere entitled lathe safety with the attached picture of a man who got caught up in a lathe due to loose fitting clothing, while the photo is gruesome, I printed it out to show my guys why I don't allow loose fitting shirts, rings, or watches in the shop, and that long hair must be tied up and covered. It really drove the point home for some of them. Be safe out there, you only get one body. |
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#11
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| Safety The one thing that I have seen in the shop is, the older we get, the slower we are. So we all (management & workers) need to be mindful of each other and help get everyone safe. Safety is everones responible, but lets get to the facts and that is you really don't want to see anyone get hard. Lets all stay safe out there. ron2008 |
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#12
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| In me old company when work was slack the management had the guys angle grinding some components out of their aluminium housings. I vagualy recalled that the components contained Thorium 232, an alpha emitter. The point only got home to management when I said "look, would you breathe in plutonium or uranium dust?" "No way" was the indignant reply. "Well" I said "Thorium 232 is more tightly controlled from a contamination point of view than both of them. Basicaly your are, by law, allowed more Plutonium or Uranium dust on the shop floor than Th232". That made the point, but I wonder what would have happened if I hadn't mentioned/ remembered it. On the other side- had a friend who worked at a comany that stripped asbestos- they wore full enclosed suits, boots and air filtered helmets. They worked in a positive pressure environment with extraction via monitored filters. When they wanted a cigarette they would hide round the back and use a stanley knife to slit a hole in the plastic enclosure which they'd tape up afterwards (of course removing their filtration helmets)... mesotheleoma takes around 25 years to develop. Another guy I knew was cleaning pitch off off a burner in a 10' X 10' enclosed cubicle with trichloethane which is non flamable, but cos of the smell the guys on the shop floor moaned so he shut the door and continued. After cleaning with tric he finished off with methanol and when done clicked the burner on to check it was ok. The atmosphere exploded blowing all the windows out- he didn't work again- the paper overals he was wearing made the burns worse. Mind you, at the same company they used to wash the picth off their hands using trichloroethane cos they'd heard that the previous stuff they used, napthalene, was dodgy. Seen a guy at the same company eating his sandwiches with his hands and arms up to his elbows covered in red arsenic trisulphide dust. Guess he didn't know it was dodgy.
__________________ I love deadlines- I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by. |
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