Stay Safe in Excavation Sites and Trenches
The risks of falling, asphyxiation, drowning, and cave-ins are realties when performing excavation and trench work.
Be sure to follow these safety guidelines from the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health:
- Provide daily inspection of excavations, protective systems, and adjacent areas to prevent potential hazards such as
soil instability, air toxicity, and equipment failure.
- Under California Code of Regulations Article 6, Section 1541, a "competent person" must be present on site while
work is being performed at all times.
- If a trench is more than 4 feet deep, a ladder, ramp, or other means of access must be within 25 lateral feet of workers.
- Shoring or other means of protection must be present on excavations 5 feet or deeper and must be installed from the
top down and removed from the bottom up.
- Materials, equipment, and excavated material (spoils) should be at least 2 feet away from the edge of the excavation site.
- Use retaining devices, such as a trench box that will extend above the top of the trench, to prevent equipment and
spoils from falling back into the excavation site.
- Idling vehicles are not allowed near excavation sites; exhaust fumes can settle inside the trench, putting workers at
risk of asphyxiation.
- Heavy machinery cannot be operated above slopes, cuts, banks and cliffs when employees are working below.
- Excavation sites should be barricaded around the perimeter.
- Emergency rescue equipment, such as breathing masks, safety harnesses, or basket stretchers, should be readily
available when hazardous conditions exist or are expected to develop during excavation.
- When evidence of a potential cave-in is present, all work near and around the work site must be stopped until a
registered professional engineer determines it is safe to resume work.
- No work should ever start unless permits are obtained and appropriate safety precautions are taken to keep employees safe.