Who has their employees climb residential towers? Like the Rohn 25 variety
that Ma’ and Pa’ use to get the games on. That type. And do you formally
train them? We do on both accounts, but interested to poll the community on
this one. I have one employee right now that said he’s not afraid o
I show them images of bad towers, leg blowouts, busted rungs, rusted
through legs, loose house brackets. have them kick the tower and watch the
top, if it moves, dont climb it.
Its not worth it for 30 bucks a month
Ive come across more theyve climbed when they shouldnt have
One thing I ask is fo
As the owner I always very clearly tell my employees that safety is in
their hands. If they deem a task as unsafe then that's an unsafe task for
them in my book no questions asked. I'm never going to push someone to do
something they don't think is safe, that's just asking for other problem
(like
I would say anyone who climbs towers should at the very least go to the
OSHA 10 hour class on fall protection. At the very least! I have seen some
shady towers. Ones with no concrete in the base and the only thing anchoring
them was the house bracket. Rusted towers. You name it so I h
we have a tower trainer come do training off the cuff.
best i can get.
the very same knowledge is provided as you get by a "certification"
end of the day... people do what they do
On Mon, Oct 16, 2017 at 11:21 PM, Justin Wilson wrote:
> I would say anyone who climbs towers should at the very le
I payed my way through college climbing towers others wouldn't climb. I
only had to work a few times a semester. i always demanded cash before I
climbed and brought a college buddy to hold the cash. 35 years ago I got
paid $3000 to relamp a tower nobody would climb. Two cross members came off
in my