First thing I thought of when this story started was where was his safety harness... If it broke I agree a lawyer someplace is licking their chops.Raises a million questions. The article said his co-workers said he was wearing his harness. If he was, did it break? If so, had it been inspected recently? Harnesses don't just break. If it was faulty, I'm betting a lawyer is already drooling and eyeing YESCO like a ribeye. It will be interesting to see if there's a "rest of the story"....
Raises a million questions. The article said his co-workers said he was wearing his harness. If he was, did it break? If so, had it been inspected recently? Harnesses don't just break. If it was faulty, I'm betting a lawyer is already drooling and eyeing YESCO like a ribeye. It will be interesting to see if there's a "rest of the story"....
P.S. That would be my last day in the sign installation business.
You can't let stuff like that keep you from living your life .
Working or playing , I would bet it was the guy that fell own fault .
Complacency , in a rush , distracted , carelessness probably were the reason he fell.
People do this work all day everyday and do not fall .
It is dangerous work , but can and is performed safely .
About 15 years ago I was working on top of a 15 foot ladder , I was up 12 ft in a ceiling and my hand hit a 277volt switch terminal and I landed on my head .
Concussion , broken collar bone , 6 broken ribs and a lost week. ( i do not remember the accident or my week in the hospital)
Back at it and more cautious , ladders and roofs don't bother me.
Have Fun and be safe !
Agreed, it was likely carelessness on his part, but if I fell from that high up, regardless of how how happened, I wouldn't be working from heights again.
This is the second YESCO employee that has fallen off that sign. The first one didnt live. Makes you wonder if the two causes are related...