Safe-T-Cover’s mission is to get backflow preventers out of utility vaults because of the dangers these confined spaces present. There are a lot of precautions you must take before entering a vault, but not every company follows them. They often find out the hard way that OSHA confined space violations are serious business.
Take what happened recently in Austin, TX. OSHA is seeking more than $300,000 in penalties from a company for two willful and three serious violations after a worker died at the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. The worker suffered asphyxiation after entering a vault. OSHA’s Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor says the tragedy could have been avoided if the company followed the proper safety procedures including air testing, communication and use of devices for employee rescue.
Let’s take a look at some of the precautions you must take before you send someone in a vault to test your backflow preventer.
OSHA’s investigation turned up some serious violations for the company in Texas. The specific violations include:
The trapped gases that were inside the vault came from a commercial grease trap. As food waste decays, hydrogen sulfide is released. Similar situations occur inside vaults that are housing backflow preventers and even meters. Odorless, tasteless gases strike without warning.
It’s important to understand the clear signs of emergencies in confined spaces. Oxygen levels of 19.5% or less may cause problems like:
As oxygen further decreases, nausea and vomiting, dizziness, collapse, seizures or convulsions, and coma can occur and eventually cause death.
In addition to the lack of oxygen, a vault may contain, there are other emergency situations that can develop.
That’s not to mention any nesting animals, spiders or snakes you may come across.
Compliance with the permit-required confined space entry standard requires the following:
Monitoring enables the attendant and entry supervisor to order employees to evacuate and alert trained response personnel if necessary.
As you can see, utility vaults are dangerous. They’re considered confined spaces by OSHA and data collected by the U.S. Department of Labor (USDOL), Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), and Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI) program shows us that nearly 100 fatalities occur in confined spaces each year and workplace deaths involving confined spaces rose 15% to 166 in 2017 from 144 in 2016.
That’s part of the reason why more and more water purveyors are pulling their backflow preventers out of vaults and installing them above ground.
But all of this comes at a cost. The extra money you have to spend each time you send someone down into a vault is significant. There’s an easier way to get your backflow preventer tested. Installing your backflow preventer above ground in an enclosure is much safer and more cost-effective. Check out our guide to find out how municipalities and water purveyors are evolving their standards for backflow prevention and stop taking unnecessary risks.