Log Pile Collapses On Truck Driver
BACKGROUND: A truck driver was binding down a tractor-trailer load of hardwood logs at a timber harvesting operation on a clear, hot spring day in the southern Appalachians.
PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS: The 40-year-old driver had worked as a truck driver for at least two years and was considered fully trained. He had no known physical disabilities and no history of accidents. He was wearing a hard hat.
UNSAFE ACT OR CONDITION: His truck was positioned alongside a hydraulic knuckleboom loader. Some yellow poplar logs had been stacked on the ground between the loader and the log trailer. The truck driver walked between the loaded trailer and the stack of yellow poplar logs to hook the load binders. The motor of the knuckleboom loader was still running.
ACCIDENT: The stack of logs gave way. The logs knocked the truck driver down, rolled over his back, and pinned him.
INJURY: The logs crushed the truck driver, causing severe internal injuries. Crew members immediately phoned 911, and the logs were removed from the injured man as quickly as possible using the knuckleboom loader and a chain saw. Other employees attempted to administer rescue breathing to the injured truck driver. The paramedics arrived 34 minutes after the phone call. The truck driver died on the way to the hospital.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR CORRECTION:
- Loaded trucks should be moved a safe distance from the loading area, or other activities at the loading area should cease, before load binders are placed and secured.
- Stacks of logs should be placed so that danger of their rolling is minimized. Stack logs on the deck in a position perpendicular to the logs on the trailer. Chocks may help to prevent log movement.
- The truck driver and the loader operator should maintain communication and be aware of each others actions on the logging deck.
Courtesy of the Forest Resources Association: forestresources.org
Latest News
Mississippi Forestry Commission Hosts Heavy Equipment Training Academy
In the past two years, Mississippi's drought levels have been about on par with California's. So, before the Forestry Commission sends any firefighters to help out West, they're making sure everyone's safe here at home. "Mississippi has a lot of urban-wildlife...
West Virginia Wildfire Still Burning After Week Of Firefighting
Despite nearly one inch of rain and the efforts of 140 firefighters and a helicopter crew, a forest fire began its second week of charring the slopes of North Fork Mountain in the Monongahela National Forest in Grant County on Monday. According to a report released...
Have A Question?
Send Us A Message