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Fall Protection for Scaffold Safety North Miami Beach FL

Today's safety experts in North Miami Beach believe accident prevention, training, and fall protection are inseparable. Scaffolding safety is a critical concern for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the masonry and scaffolding industries, and particularly for the workers themselves.

AAA Constraction Group Corp
(561) 306-2272
1075 Ne Miami Gardens Dr
Miami, FL
Able Quality Services Contracting
954-923-4882
607 N 21st Ave
Hollywood, GA
Star Group - General Contracotr, Concrete Restoration & Roofing
(866) 870-7827
2412 SW 59th Terrace
Hollywood, FL
The Lewis Corporation
954-703-0184
5207 Grant Street
Hollywood, FL
BROWN PLUMBING LLC
(305) 764-1731
19121 nw 37 ct
miami, FL
creative directions, inc
305 933-9392
1991 ne 194 dr.
N. Miami Beach, FL
Florida Granite, Corp.
305-655-0770
536 NE 195th Street
North Miami Beach, FL
IGK Design Group
954-364-4647
5805 SW 21st Street
Hollywood, FL
Gas Connection Inc
(954) 965-8060
6428 Rodman Street
hollywood, FL
Automatimatic Gates and Access Control of Miami
404-431-2133
6815 Biscayne Blvd
Miami, FL
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Fall Protection for Scaffold Safety

Source: MASONRY CONSTRUCTION MAGAZINE
Publication date: July 15, 2001

By Scott Paul

Abstract:

Today's safety experts believe accident prevention, training, and fall protection are inseparable. Scaffolding safety is a critical concern for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the masonry and scaffolding industries, and particularly for the workers themselves.

Scaffolding accidents have many causes: falling objects, electrocution, falls during assembly/disassembly, falls while working, overturns, falls while climbing, and construction deficiencies.

Shock-absorbing lanyards quickly have become the modern standard in fall protection. Lanyards have tensile stress between 5750 and 10,000 pounds. The best lanyards are made of tough polyester webbing and reduce the arrest forces on a worker during a fall to 900 pounds, which is half the maximum allowance, according to OSHA, and translates to an acceptable impact to your body.

The D-ring is the main connection point to any harness. A front D-ring attached to the chest strap is critical for safe connection to a ladder-climbing safety mechanism, such as a fixed cable or rail system. A back D-ring connected to a lanyard or self-retracting lifeline will keep you in an upright position in case of a fall. Side D-rings generally are used for restraint and work positioning.

When anchorage is existing construction is limited, horizontal lifelines are the way to go. A cable is affixed securely at the ends, and ...

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