How to avoid falling objects when working at heights
You may have great fall protection measures in place to keep employees safe when working at height, but what about their co-workers below?
Dropped tools and other falling objects are a major hazard – and one that isn’t always fully addressed.
The following notes will give a clear summary of best practice in securing tools, avoiding tool drops and increasing safety in your
workplace.
The problem:
Technicians in the metal working and energy sectors are especially likely to find themselves operating at heights. Think, for instance, of
the long climbs involved in maintaining a wind turbine or a tall building. Even a small item of equipment dropped from such a
position can seriously injure anyone hit by it. In the United States alone, more than 50,000 people each year suffer injuries
due to falling objects, according to OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration).
What the law says:
Who is responsible for your injury? The person who put it there? You – for not being careful? Somebody else? The responsibility is shared.
Every business needs to comply with Health and Safety at Work Act from 2015. It lists step by step guides on how to prevent injuries from
taking place. Falling objects are one of those threats that need to be prevented.
People Responsible For Your Safety
Of course, you need to take care of your safety. However, if you are at your workplace, there are others that share that responsibility with
you. HSW Act recognises following people as duty holders:
PCBU
Officer
Worker
Other persons at workplace
PCBU is the ‘person conducting business or undertaking’. It can be an organisation or an individual and they have the primary duty of care.
This means that they need to make sure the health and safety of the employees are not put at risk at their workplace.Of course, it is their
responsibility to ensure this as long as it is reasonably practicable.
The Officer is usually a company director. It is a person who has control or significant influence over the management. Their duty is to
make sure that PCBU enforces all the safety measures.
Workers and other persons at a workplace are not without their responsibilities when it comes to health and safety. They need to do take
care of themselves and everyone around them when performing their work.
Prevention Steps A PCBU Needs To Take
The main responsibility for the safety of the employees falls upon the PCBU. There are several steps that he needs to take to prevent
accidents, including the injuries by falling objects. The first is to eliminate the risk and if that is not possible, then
to minimise it.
For example, let us say that you work in a warehouse and there are many heavy boxes stored. Eliminating the risk from one of those boxes
falling on you would be – storing them on the ground.
Minimising the risk, on the other hand, can be done in several ways.
Substitution – replacing the hazard with something of a lesser risk. In the case of warehouse boxes, it could mean packing stuff in
smaller boxes or placing them on lower shelves.
Isolation – preventing people from getting in touch with the hazard. In this example, this would mean limiting the access to the areas
below the boxes.
Engineering control measures – coming up with physical control measures, including processes or mechanical devices. For example, placing
strong bars that keep the boxes from falling.
Administrative control measures – these are all work processes and procedures that are not managed by engineering or wearing PPE. In
this example, it could be introducing all warehouse workers with a guide about how to store and handle boxes safely.
Using Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) – the name says it all. In the case of warehouse boxes, it would mean wearing a protective
helmet.
When it comes to threat of falling objects, HSW Act requires from your PCBU to try
and do the following:
Prevent objects from falling
If that is impossible, arrest the freefall
If even that is impossible, introduce a ‘no-go’ zone
How To Prevent The Objects From Falling?
Nobody can have full control over every little thing that happens at the workplace. Accidents always happen. Gravity will do its thing and
some of those tools will fall down from the scaffolds.
Your PCBU should do everything that is reasonably practicable to keep those falling objects from hurting you.
All the objects and tools at heights need to be secured, tied down or put away from the edges.
Ensuring safe ways of raising and lowering the objects
Arresting the fall by providing safety nets, covering pedestrian walks and providing overhead protection
How To Protect People Around You
Some people work at heights and they need to be trained on safety measures. In that way, they will know how to protect their coworkers and
themselves. Safety measures include:
Keeping everything away from edges
Securing tools and materials and fixating them
Keeping the work area clean and tidy
Using chutes to place debris into the skip area which needs to be below
If you are moving a load from one place to another, make sure that you take care of the following:
Secure and balance load before lifting it
Take into account the weight and the external factors like wind
Make sure that the equipment that you use is fully operational
Establish a ‘no-go’ zone while you move the objects
Worst Case Scenario: Someone Got Hurt
Even if everybody is being very careful, somebody might get hurt. In that case, you need to have your First Aid Kit ready. Moreover, it
needs to be compliant to all the legal requirements.
Your First Aid Kit needs to be positioned near the places where is more likely for accidents to occur. If your workplace includes some
potential risks, there should be a trained first aider among your employees.
Having a proper First Aid Kit that is always up to date and fully stocked is somewhat challenging. Replacing the items from it can slip your
mind. However, if a falling object hurts somebody, you need to know that your Kit contains all you need for dressing that wound. Reference:
Alsco.co.nz
Six step to prevent injuries from falling objects
Provide Warning. When working on a jobsite where the potential for falling objects exist the employer needs to provide
adequate warning for both the employee and other people who may enter the jobsite. ...
Secure loads. ...
Properly move load. ...
Keep a clean worksite. ...
Administrative controls. ...
Protective Equipment.
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