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Dixon Valve Newsletter:February:Search:Safety User Manual

Don’t ‘run it till it drops, Keeping it safe

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34

BOSS

FA L L

/

W I N T E R

2013

KEEPING IT SAFE

/

BY PHIL KIMBLE

>

We’ve all heard the saying “Time is

money.” Th is expression is especially

profound for a contract with a specifi c

fi nish date and penalties to pay if the

project isn’t completed on time. With

the completion date looming, we have

one eye on the project and one eye on

the clock. One wrong move is a recipe

for disaster.

Th e rainiest summer in years had

put the concrete slab pouring for the

new industrial park way behind

schedule. But things were looking up.

Th e 10-day forecast was clear skies and

low humidity—perfect pouring days.

Th e project manager gathered the

workers to explain the situation, telling

them that, until further notice, everyone

would be working double shift s with

no days off . Also, nothing should be

done other than pouring concrete.

When one worker asked about sched-

uled maintenance for the equipment,

the reply was, “Run it till it drops,

we’ll deal with it later.”

Th e project manager and his

assistant were in their offi ce reviewing

their progress, when, aft er 13 straight

days of

pouring slabs, they

calculated the project as less than two

days away from being back on track.

Aft er checking the fi ve-day forecast and

seeing no predicted change in the

weather, they began “high fi ving” each

other. If the weather would hold out,

not only would they be on schedule,

they’d be ahead of schedule. Th e

celebration was cut short, however,

when one of the crew supervisors

barged through the door yelling, “Boss,

we got a problem! Dial 911 now!”

Don’t ‘Run It Till It Drops’

Ignoring scheduled maintenance can have deadly consequences