Excavation 02
Excavation 02
Excavation 02
6
Do You See Safe Work Practices in Place
Here?
7
Do You See Safe Work Practices in Place
Here?
8
Are These Good or Bad Examples of Excavation
Safety?
9
Are These Good or Bad Examples of
Excavation Safety?
10
Are These Good or Bad Examples of
Excavation Safety?
11
Are These Good or Bad Examples of Excavation
Safety?
12
Scope, Application & Definition
“Competent Person”
The single most important definition
contained in this Subpart is that of
“Competent Person”
A competent person is defined as one who
is capable of identifying existing and
predictable hazards in the surroundings, or
working conditions which are unsanitary,
hazardous, or dangerous to employees and
who has the authority to take prompt
corrective measures to eliminate them 13
What Makes you an Excavation
Competent Person?
15
Did The Competent Person Do Their Job
Here?
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Did The Competent Person Do Their Job
Here?
17
Did The Competent Person Do Their Job
Here?
18
Did The Competent Person Do Their Job
Here?
19
General Requirements
Surface encumbrances must be supported or
removed if they pose a hazard to workers
All underground utilities or other similar type
installations must be located prior to any
excavation beginning. Those same may need
to be supported, removed or protected
20
General Requirements
Proper access and egress must be always
available to workers
Ramps & runways
Stairways & ladders
Required 4’ or deeper
Maximum of 25’ lateral travel by worker to reach
Workers exposed to vehicular traffic must
wear DOT type vests or equal
21
Are These Good or Bad Examples
of Access & Supporting Utilities?
22
Are These Good or Bad Examples
of Access & Supporting Utilities?
23
Examples of Barrier Protection Around the
Excavation Perimeter
25
General Requirements
Workers must not work in excavations
that contain water
Any structure adjacent to an excavation
must be properly supported to prevent
collapse
Workers must be protected from loose
materials or soil going into the
excavation
26
Good or Bad Examples?
27
Good or Bad Examples?
28
Good or Bad Examples?
29
Good or Bad Examples?
30
General Requirements
All excavations & any
protective equipment
used in same must be
inspected on a daily
basis by a competent
person & must occur
prior to any starting
Walkways equipped
with guardrails must be
provided where workers
or equipment cross over
excavations 31
Requirements for Protective
Systems
Any worker in an excavation shall be
protected from cave-ins by an adequate
protective system except when:
Excavation made entirely in stable rock
Excavation less than 5’ deep & inspection by
competent person reveals no cave-in hazard
All protective systems to have capacity to
resist without failure all loads that are
intended or reasonably could be expected
to be applied or transmitted to the
protective system 32
Are Proper Precautions Being Taken in
These Examples?
33
Are Proper Precautions Being Taken in
These Examples?
34
Are Proper Precautions Being Taken in
These Examples?
35
A Good Example of an Engineered
Shoring Plan
38
Soil Classification
Type B Soil
Cohesive soil with an
unconfined compressive
strength of 1000-3000#
per square foot
Granular cohesionless
soils: silt, silt loam, sandy
loam
Can be Type B soil if:
Unstable dry rock
Type A fissured or subject
to vibration
Layered with slope <394/1
Soil Classification
Type C Soil
Cohesive soil with an
unconfined compressive
strength of < 1000 # per
square foot
Granular soils including
gravel, sand & loamy sand
Must be Type C soil if:
Submerged soil or soil from
which water is weeping
Unstable submerged rock
Any previously disturbed soil
(previously excavated)40
Would You Work in These
Trench Boxes?
41
Would You Work in These
Trench Boxes?
42
Would You Work in These
Trench Boxes?
43
Good and Bad Examples of Trench
and Excavation Protection
44
Good and Bad Examples of Trench
and Excavation Protection
45
Good and Bad Examples of Trench
and Excavation Protection
46
Good and Bad Examples of Trench
and Excavation Protection
47
An Excellent Example of all Facets of
Excavation Safety