Stay Safe
Learn from These Mistakes
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Take a lesson from these terrible,
true stories about mishaps with electricity and natural
gas. The "Dont do what they did!" links
will take you to relevant safety information on this
site, so you can prevent similar tragedies.
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Dont Mess with Electrical Equipment
A 20-year-old man was electrocuted in California when
he broke into the base of a streetlight and attempted
to sever a ¾-inch electrical wire carrying 4,000
volts. The young man had wanted to darken the street
to help his 17-year-old sister get a better view of
the Perseid meteor shower. (Source: Long Beach Press-Telegram)
Dont
do what he did!
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Watch for Fallen Lines After Storms
A 48-year-old woman, her 11-year-old twin boys, a 14-year-old
friend and the family dog went out walking after Hurricane
Irene. Strolling ahead of the woman, the three boys
and the dog walked into a puddle where a fallen power
line was submerged in the murky water. They were
all instantly electrocuted. The woman ran toward the
fallen children. Upon stepping into the water near the
boys, she was electrocuted too. (Source: Associated
Press)
Dont
do what they did!
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A Fishing Pole Is Safer
A 43-year-old man in Kiev electrocuted himself while
fishing in a river. The man connected cables to the
main power supply of his home and placed the ends
in the river. The electric shock killed the fish,
which floated belly-up to the top of the water. The
man waded in to collect his catch, having neglected
to remove the live wires, and tragically suffered the
same fate as the fish. (Source: Deutsche Press-Agentir)
Dont do what he did!
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Know How to Cut Power in Case of Shock
An 18-year-old male restaurant worker kneeled to plug
a portable electric toaster into a floor outlet. After
a scream was heard, the victim was found convulsing
on the damp floor, with one hand on the plug and the
other on the receptacle box. The assistant manager went
to the electrical panel but was unable to locate
the appropriate circuit breaker. After telephoning
the emergency medical service, the manager returned
to the panel and managed to de-energize all the circuitsbut
not until 3 to 8 minutes after the man had first contacted
the electricity! Resuscitation efforts were unsuccessful
and the man was pronounced dead on arrival at the local
hospital. (Source: National Institutes of Occupational
Safety and Health)
Dont do what he did!
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She Dried Her Hair in the Tub
A 33-year-old former beauty queen died from electric
shock in her apartment. She dropped a hair dryer into
the water while bathing. (Source: Warsaw Voice News)
Don't
do what she did!
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He Tried to Cut a Power Line
An Oregon man drove his truck into a mailbox, then collided
with a utility pole. The impact flipped the truck onto
its side and sent a 7,500-volt power line falling to
the ground. The 25-year-old man apparently was uninjured
in the collision and safely exited the truck, a witness
told investigators. However, his luck ran out when he
attempted to cut the line with a pair of pruning
shears. When authorities arrived at the scene, the man
was lying motionless and face down on the power line,
the pruning shears in his hands. (Source: The Oregonian)
Dont
do what he did!
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A Sad Sailing Tale
A university student who was one of the best small boat
sailors in the United States was killed when his
boat mast touched a power line at a Massachusetts
yacht club. The young man had recently won a boating
championship and was to have assisted at the first U.S.
Youth Championship Regatta. (Source: International Lightning
Class Association)
Dont
do what he did!
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If the Tool Shocks, Get Rid of It
A 45-year-old man was putting metal siding on a house,
using an electric drill while standing in the bucket
of a backhoe. His older brother was standing beside
him when the man began to scream and shake. The brother
grabbed him, received an electric shock, and was thrown
from the bucket. The man dropped the drill and then
collapsed. CPR was administered at the site and during
the 90-minute drive to the nearest hospital, where the
man died. The brother indicated they had repeatedly
had problems with the drill and had taken it to the
repair shop several times with the complaint that it
was delivering shocks. In each instance, nothing
was found to be wrong with the drill. After the death
the drill was tested one more time; it delivered a shock
so intense that the electrician involuntarily threw
the drill across the room. (Source: Southern Medical
Journal)
Dont
do what they did!
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If You Smell Gas, Get Out Fast
A 39-year-old Canadian woman refused to leave her home
despite a gas line rupture and was killed when the gas
exploded. The womans husband had hit a buried
natural gas line while digging footings for a room addition.
He went into the house and warned his wife of the gas
leak, but she assured him she was safe. The man went
back outside to wait for repair technicians to arrive.
The explosion knocked the man down, and he was dragged
away from the flames by a friend. The woman died in
the fire. (Source: Alberta.com news report)
Dont do
what she did!
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That Cigarette Could Have Been His Last
A man who was upset because his girlfriend had left
him decided to kill himself by causing a gas explosion
in his apartment. After leaving the gas on for a while,
he reconsidered and turned it off. Then he sat down
and lit a cigarette. The resulting explosion blew the
roof off the building, but (amazingly) no one was seriously
injured. (Source: Bozo Criminal Reports)
Don't do what
he did!
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