Make this page my home page

  1. Drag the home icon in this panel and drop it onto the "house icon" in the tool bar for the browser

  2. Select "Yes" from the popup window and you're done!

New Features added to Code 3 Handheld Siren

Ky. firefighters train in trenches

Most Popular Articles

Sign up for FREE Email Newsletters

Enter your email below

Education and Training Article

Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This


Ky. firefighters train in trenches

Exercises focus on below-surface emergencies

By Joanie Baker
Messenger-Inquirer

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — In the past seven years, firefighters in Louisville have responded to more than 10 emergency situations involving dirt trenches dug throughout the city, officials said.

On Tuesday, Owensboro firefighters spent the afternoon rehearsing techniques for responding to a trench disaster using a freshly dug, 8-foot-deep hole at the Walter L. Freeman Regional Training Center.

Battalion Chief David McCrady said the regional Task Force 3 response team, which responds to hazardous materials and weapons of mass destruction in the Green River area, identified different incidents related to their coverage that should be met with training exercises.

Of those incidents, firefighters have received training on confined-space rescue and below-grade-area, or trench-related, rescues. In the future, McCrady said, he would like to see officials undergo training in collapsed-building response techniques as well.

"We've become an all-hazardous response department, and if we don't address the hazards we see in our service area, when an incident arises, we won't be prepared," McCrady said. "And we want to make sure we give the community the best service we can possibly give."

A trench is defined as an excavated area that is more than 5 feet deep and is deeper than it is wide. And with all of the construction projects and new businesses developing throughout the city, McCrady said, there is significant potential for one of the many trenches to result in the use of emergency responders.

According to OSHA standards, all trenches are supposed to be supported by large wooden panels pressed against the dirt walls with shores, or expanding support beams.

Using ropes to lower a 4-foot by 8-foot red panel and pneumatic shores, firefighters used air pressure to make the beams essentially inflate to the width of the trench. A ladder is then lowered into the hole and officials strapped in harnesses can safely climb into the deep ditch for rescues.

While local officials have not had to respond to a trench disaster to date, McCrady said the training is important as there are nearly 100 trench-related deaths annually throughout the country. In the past several months, he said he has been on work sites in the city where crews were working many feet below ground level without proper protection in place.

"It's about like anything else, some places follow OSHA and do a good job protecting employees and others are either uneducated or cut corners and endanger employees," he said. "The hazards are out there and we've got to recognize they're there and be ready to respond to them."

Copyright 2007 Messenger-Inquirer
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News



LexisNexis Copyright © 2008 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.   Terms and Conditions Privacy Policy


Print Talk BackRegisterBookmarkRSSWhat's This

Member Comments: Submit Your Comment
FireRescue1 encourages its members to comment on this article in the comments section below. You must be a registered member of FireRescue1 to post a comment. The comments below are member-generated and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of FireRescue1 or its staff.

Most Commented Articles
 1.  Looking Back, Looking Ahead at Firefighter Safety
 2.  Maine volunteer sues after losing job
 3.  Fire captain arrested for apparatus placement awarded $17,500 in Mo.
 4.  16 Ways to Stay Safe
 5.  Goldfeder: All Solutions are Local
 6.  Get Ready to Chill in '09
 7.  My Road to Recovery After Crash
 8.  The Greater Good
 9.  Being a Time Management Leader
 10.  Ohio fire wipes out health-food livestock business