The Construction Thread

They are forced to. If you say you don't like it, they say you're not being safe. In reality, it's BS. Oh damn, the safety guy just wrote me up!

Yeah.

They won't let us wear our own hard hats either.

I think they just don't like the union stickers.
 
The big companies want you to dress like a flagger.


I noticed that the other day whilst passing a site and said to myself, "Boy I'm glad I didn't have to dress like that back in the days when I was out in the hot sunshine and it was 97° with 65% humidity."


You can thank your friendly local tort lawyer/ambulance chaser and OSHA regulator for it.


Since that's what this society has devolved to, the insurance company folk tend to be rather insistent that establishing ironclad dress requirements and strict adherence to them trumps the exercise of judgment and common sense.


 
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I noticed that the other day whilst passing a site and said to myself, "Boy I'm glad I didn't have to dress like that back in the days when I was out in the hot sunshine and it was 97° with 65% humidity.


You can thank your friendly local tort lawyer/ambulance chaser and OSHA regulator for it.


Since that's what this society has devolved to, the insurance company folk tend to be rather insistent that establishing ironclad dress requirements and strict adherence to them trumps the exercise of judgment and common sense.



Absolutely. That's why I don't really complain too much. We basically brought this annoying safety stuff on ourselves. It's annoying to have the 25 year old Eastern District Safety Manager telling me I swing the boom of a manlift too fast, but I'd rather have their eye on me than go back to the old days.

I do like the new program in Jersey where they take people involved in ironworker safety (OSHA officials, insurance company folks, etc),strap them with a full belt with two loaded bolt bags, beater, 3 wrenches and a connecting bar, fall arrest harness and lanyard and then have them get up on the mock up iron at the apprentice school and try to do something...anything....with all that stuff on.
 
Company general foreman sticking his nose into the job:

"Send those tubes (6x6x20") six at a time, not four, it's taking too long".

Me unloading truck:

"It's not safe on the dolly. That's why I'm doing it this way".

Foreman:

"Don't worry about it!!! Let's go".

Me:

"OK"

************************************************

2 hours later, he's gone of course:

My partner:

"Look out!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

One load of steel:

"CRASSSSSSSSSSSSHHHHHHH"

Misses my leg by a foot and cracks the expensive stone floor.
 
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