Greetings,
I believe the new rules proposed for crane safety are off base in a number of areas.
In skimming the published costs associated with compliance, I believe the
numbers are significantly too low. As a small crane rental company owner, the
costs will be much higher than those listed. Besides additional training and the
costs associated with that, there will be downtime that I will never recoup, as well
as travel and lodging expenses for travel to a training site nearest my rural area. I
will have to pay for not only training crane operators, but their travel, food and
lodging as well. Once the certification card I paid for is in their pocket, they are
free to take it anywhere. I propose listing the employer on the certification card
and making the employee reimburse the employer that paid for their training if
they leave within 3 years. Alternately, impose a fee of say, $1000, on the
cardholder to change the employers name on the card.
Another great concern to me is the fact that a person can become a certified
crane operator with little or no actual experience. It has been my opinion for years
that there are a lot of people operating cranes that have no business being in or
near the operators seat. Without addressing this glaring deficiency in
experience, "certified" will mean very little. I personally know of a concrete
company that sent a form carpenter to a training seminar and he became a
certified crane operator in less than a week. Total experience in crane operation?
0 hours! He had actually never sat in a crane prior to this fiasco.
On top of my own expenses, the tradesman that work with cranes in my area will
also be obligated for similar training and expense with regard to riggers and signal
persons. Unfortunately, when faced with these expenses for labor that is ever
more transient, I anticipate a total disregard for the regulations pertaining to
riggers and signalpersons. For instance, an HVAC contractor that uses a crane
once or twice a month for one or two lifts each time, has little or no incentive to
spend hundreds or thousands of dollars on training for one or more employee that
may leave his job anytime. Multiply this by the number of employees that
actually should be trained, depending on the number of crews employed. Even
the small HVAC shops in my area employ 3-5 persons in the field. The same
holds true with many other trades, especially in the residential construction
market.
Carpenters are one of the largest users of small cranes and boom trucks for the
placement of prefabricated roof trusses, beams, etc. on housing and light
commercial projects. In my 30 years of experience operating cranes for these
types of rental customers, they are also the most ill equipped for the work at
hand. They seldom know any standard crane signals and don't know anything
whatsoever about rigging techniques,safe practice or crane capacity and how it
relates to their work. In the last 10 years or so, communication has become a
huge issue as well. Many times, I drive up to jobsites where not one person
onsite can even speak any English. The fact that I have owned and operated
cranes for 30 years without incident of any kind becomes even more remarkable in
this light.
I believe that if I attempt to comply with my end of the regulation, as a crane
owner/operator, and try to force this compliance on tradesmen that use my
service, they will reject the additional complication and simply ignore the rules. I
foresee myself being placed in a situation where I will either be asked to ignore
the rules for riggers and signalpersons, supplied by the customers but untrained
and non-certified, or simply told to leave, whereby the customer will rent a crane
from another rental company that does ignore the rules. In other words, play by
the rules and risk losing your business clients or ignore the rules and risk losing
your business. Either way, I am in a bad situation.
I believe a better route to follow would be to award some form of mitigation or even
immunity to those of us who play by the rules and have an outstanding safety
record to back it up. If I comply and the persons or businesses I work for do not, I
should receive some mitigation or immunity if there is an incident involving the
crane or it's operation. After all, a proven safety record speaks for itself and total
disregard for the rules should also.
I believe one unintended result of the new crane rule will be losing competent
personnel. As I have stated, I have 30 years of safe crane ownership and
operation under my belt. I don't know how many more years I will be involved in
the crane business, but I guarantee my time will be shorter if I face higher liability
potential for work practices in the control of others who have a total disregard for
new training and qualification rules. I have been asking my customers for the last
year if they intend to train their personnel who work with cranes, per the new
upcoming rules. To a man, they had never heard of the rules and not one, I
repeat, NOT ONE had any intention of doing anything differently in the future than
they had in the past. Where does this leave me, the small crane business
owner? I foresee another bureaucratic morass that will only be sorted out bit by
bit through expensive litigation in the courts, another cost not included in
the "Cost of Compliance" chart.
In closing, I believe the rule will not be of any great benefit to the industry as a
whole because of a total disregard for it by the majority of small tradesmen who
will disregard it, if they have even heard of it. I am the type of responsible crane
owner that will be affected by higher training and operational costs, but potentially
forced out of the business by those who do not follow the rules. Unfortunately, I
am the type of safety oriented crane owner/operator that should be kept in the
industry. I feel the rules will hasten the exit from the industry of professionals that
are needed. The ones that ignore rules will ignore these, also.
Regards,
Chuck Mostert
Mostert Cranes
Comment from Mostert, Charles, Mostert Cranes and Equipment, Inc.
This is comment on Proposed Rule
Cranes and Derricks in Construction
View Comment
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