Working Near Power Lines Auburn NY

More than fifty construction workers are killed each year electrocuted by contact with power lines found both overhead and underground on almost every construction site in the country.

Cook'S Construction & Restoration Consultants, Inc.
800-922-9270
8091 High Street
Montezuma, NY
DAVE MARION CARPENTRY INC
315-364-8578
2492 FRY ROAD
AURORA, NY
Minnesota Mitigation (952) 938-1006 Radon Removal Testing & Remediation St. Paul-Minneapolis Mn
952-938-1006
1912 Suburban Ave.
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800-444-4923
203- 20 Rocky Hill Road
Bayside, NY
R.L. Gant Construction
615-686-2933
3935 Pheasant Dr
Nashville, NY
Cramer Home Inspection Group, Inc.
877-255-2147
101 Cayuga St
Seneca Falls, NY
Expert Chimney Services, Inc
315 469 5004
4800 McDonald Rd
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New World Construction, Inc.
410-366-0444
722 Dulaney Valley Road, Suite 284
Towson, NY
Uvs Construction
(718) 554-0426
Beach 74Th St
Arverne, NY
Tonya L. Previglian - Independent Contractor
(716) 838-0966
753 Crescent Ave.
Buffalo, NY
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Working Near Power Lines

Source: El Nuevo Constructor
Publication date: May 1, 2007

More than fifty construction workers are killed each year electrocuted by contact with power lines found both overhead and underground on almost every construction site in the country.

The leading cause of contact involves heavy equipment like cranes, drilling rigs, concrete pumps, aerial buckets, dump trucks and backhoes. Of all heavy equipment contacts, cranes—either mobile or boom trucks--account for almost 60 percent of electrocutions.

But you can also be electrocuted when handling other construction materials and tools like long aluminum paint rollers, long-handled cement finishing floats, metal siding and roofing, metal ladders, and scaffolding.

Protect Yourself

Protect yourself from live power lines by looking around your work area and identifing the location of all power lines before you move or erect any equipment. Make certain that no part of any equipment comes any closer than at least 10 feet from the power line. And remember, this distance is greater for voltages above 50kV. Don't operate equipment around overhead lines unless you are authorized and trained to do so. Contrary to what many workers think, overhead power lines do carry enough voltage to kill and most are not insulated.

Maintain Safe Distances

Below are the minimum distances to maintain from power lines of different voltages. Remember, the higher the voltage running through the line, the farther away you need to be to b...

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