Emergencies are an unfortunate element of a job site, even when you think you have all of your bases covered. With multiple compliance factors, necessary planning and the unpredictability of a job site, errors can happen. When those do occur, it’s important to know that your safety rescue plan is well-formed and executed by highly trained teams.
In this blog, we explore the main types of rescue, their most common locations and the equipment that professionals should implement.
When executing planned jobs, your team will often be required to have the proper rescue services on standby should anything happen. These standby rescue teams should already have a strong understanding of your project’s standard operating procedures, emergency response plan and other relevant permitting. While these teams might not be external, they should be highly trained in the required rescue types.
When dealing with emergency situations, you don’t have a minute to spare. Your emergency rescue teams, which will be dealing with confined space, technical rope and high angle rescues, need to be able to respond quickly and calmly to an emergency as to reduce overall damages and ensure worker safety.
Getting stuck in tight spaces can limit access points, so it’s important that your rescue team can work quickly and safely to extract any compromised workers. Things like storage tanks, pits, silos, vats and pipelines have restricted entry and exit points, poor ventilation and are certainly not designed for continuous occupation.
In confined spaces, you can be exposed to atmospheric hazards like toxic gases and oxygen-depleted air as well as physical hazards including extreme temperatures, drowning or electrical shock.
A rescue team outfitted with the proper equipment should include:
When a response team needs to use ropes to assist in a rescue, these technical rope rescues require both an extensive knowledge of rope management and knot tying as well as the myriad locations they might be deployed in. These locations include mountainsides, bridges, scaffolding, smokestacks and ditches.
For all of these situations, your team will need to employ unique equipment strategies to ensure safety rescue execution. Necessary equipment may include:
While similar to rope rescue, high angle rescue carries specific regulatory standards that often require external teams to ensure compliance. Technically, high angle rescue is when the effort involves a slope of 60 degrees or greater and is typically related to cranes, towers, shafts, scaffolding and piping.
High angle specialists operate in teams of four or five and utilize equipment including: