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Detached Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: southern California
Posts: 26,964
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Almost got killed this evening
I was on one of my TV shows at a power plant and five minutes after I got there a stunt rigger drops a cordless drill from 20 feet up on a catwalk and it smashes to the ground between me and the Unit Production Manager, we were maybe four feet apart. I was so shook up, I didn't think to take a picture of the smashed cordless drill with my iPhone. They should have cleared the area below, when working above like that.
Its bad ju-ju when you kill the Safety Guy or one of the Producers. |
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Dog-faced pony soldier
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Damn! Glad you're okay. Would a hard hat have made a difference? Is it standard protocol for people to wear them in such locations? Might be worth implementing a policy about it for exactly that kind of reason!
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 3,003
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At what height do tools have to be tethered?
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Detached Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: southern California
Posts: 26,964
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We typically don't wear hard hats (in fact, shorts, T-Shirts are normal). Some power plants require hardhats, steel toed boots, etc. This one is mothballed, so no such requirements. This was a typical one, too many people, from too many departments doing too many things. I'd just gotten there and was sort of assessing what was going on. In five more minutes, I'd like to think that I would have had cleared the area below.
13 years ago on one of my first Tech Scouts with the TV show "Alias" I was in Chinatown in downtown LA we were at lunch at a local Chinese restaurant, and the restaurant owner's little kid dropped a wooden bowl from the mezzanine above and it hit me on the head and required a few stitches. My job is generally safe, but I'm around people loading pyro all week long. I have a set of "Nomex" type shirt and pants, and I only wear 100% cotton socks and underwear when we are doing that stuff. For some explosions, we load gasoline into plastic bags (shudder). |
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Detached Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: southern California
Posts: 26,964
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Jr
Good question, and I don't think we have an industry answer. But in thinking about it, I'm sure as schit going to bring it up with the Industry-Wide, Labor-Management Safety Committee, which meets every month. That Committee represents all the Unions in Hollywood and all the major studios. We publish the motion picture industry Safety Bulletins, which are interesting if you want to look at them. Lots of weird stuff regarding filming safety, infant actors, venomous reptiles, a bunch of really weird stuff that you've probably never thought of regarding filming. Its a public website, so I'm not giving any secrets away. http://csatf.org/bulletintro.shtml You might also be interested in the Industry Safety training program. We hire lots of workers from the Industry and have developed an Industry-wide safety training program, so if you work for Disney, Warner Bros, Fox, Universal, Sony, Paramount, you get the same fungible or transferable training. You can find it at the same website here: http://csatf.org/sppdesc.pdf While I don't run it anymore, I was the Architect of that training program. Its since been modeled by most the of refineries that hire outside workers from the same contractors. I think we've included something like 40,000 Hollywood crew members in the program. Last edited by Hugh R; 10-23-2015 at 08:37 PM.. |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Clinton, NJ
Posts: 12,782
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It's worse ju-ju to have cordless drill land on your head from 20 ft. up. Glad you're okay.
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Los Angeles
Posts: 17,291
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Hugh, close one. Luck is really on your side. I once had a hammer drop off the top of a ladder onto my head. This young man who was working for my plumber left it up there. That was only a 6' ladder and it hurt like hell.
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Detached Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: southern California
Posts: 26,964
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My BIL was a fire sprinkler fitter on a high rise in LA someone dropped a big ass wrench 10 stories and when he went to retrieve it, he found it spot welded to the steel deck.
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What?!?!
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Typically, I enjoy hearing of the safety aspects of your job.
Tonight, I'm REALLY glad to be hearing from YOU. Yowza! I'm a Field Engineer with GE Healthcare and work in Diagnostic Imaging, specifically Nuclear Medicine. One of my other responsibilities is I'm a certified Smith System Driving Instructor. I've always been drawn to the safety aspect of my job and I'll probably move into more of an active Safety role in the next few years. For me, my usual work environment is one room and I control who's there and who comes in. When I think of your world, even I get antsy. You must get challenged endlessly by naysayers.
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Location: Los Angeles
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Quote:
Those big commercial jobs are dangerous because there are so many people and they all do not know each others bad habits. |
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Detached Member
Join Date: May 2003
Location: southern California
Posts: 26,964
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My work isn't just production safety like stunts and special effects. Its also about logistics. Case in point, we filmed the movies "Deja Vu" and The Guardian in NOLA, before Katrina. "Deja Vu" is a pretty good Sc-Fi move if you haven't seen it.
We planned for Katrina, knew hurricanes could be a factor, maybe we shouldn't have filmed there, but not my call. You may recall the hundreds of yellow school buses that got flooded. We had hundreds of production and personal vehicles between those two show. We lost exactly one pickup truck, one trailer and one really large photocopy machine, that is it. My fault, I was there and didn't check the automatic garage openers, and their manual over-rides, which failed in a power loss, the manual over-rides were rusted and trashed, I should have known better, but won't make that mistake again. Lesson learned. We had an evacuation plan, nothing elaborate, but we had a plan. I can tell you for a fact that the NOLA police didn't have one case of bottled water for emergency supplies. NOLA like most cities got millions after 9/11, that money "disappeared" We evacuated 750 people from those two shows on chartered flights, and by car, a day or two before because we watched the weather and had a plan. |
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2004
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Quote:
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Registered
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Glad you are alright Hugh. Sometimes it takes an incident or near accident like this(it reminds me of a recent near car accident I had) to reassess life and think how lucky we are to be alive. It no doubt indicates how steps can be taken to prevent this kind of thing happening again.....
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Model Citizen
Join Date: May 2007
Location: The Voodoo Lounge
Posts: 18,686
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Glad you're ok, Hugh.
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Crusty Conservative
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Yes, Hugh, very glad to hear you are unscathed in this incident. I'm going to send a link to this thread to my Son in Law, who is a Project Manger/ Safety Engineer in Chemical Refineries.
Keep safe, that hard hat sounds like a great idea!!
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G'day!
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Good time to buy a lottery ticket?
Stay safe, Hugh!
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Old dog....new tricks..... |
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resident samsquamch
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Cooterville, Cackalacky
Posts: 6,815
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That's really scary Hugh! I'm relieved that you dodged the drill-bullet! Not long ago, they were remodeling my office building. Lots of workers on the interior, running cable, hanging new lights, working up in the ceiling, etc. Every time I walked past them or they were working around me, I could feel my shoulders shrug and the hair standing up on my neck, just waiting for something to drop. I finally convinced HR to let my team work from home until the work was complete in our area.
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Quote:
VERY glad that the drill missed you... angela
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Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 44,192
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You're head is pretty hard Hugh, you would have been just fine, might have even sharpened the bit a little.
Glad you're OK!
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