Volunteer Fire Fighter Killed Rescuing Injured Construction Worker When Struck by Collapsing Cell Phone Tower – West Virginia
On February 1, 2014, a 28-year-old male volunteer fire fighter
died after being struck by a collapsing cell phone tower. The fire
fighter was rescuing an injured construction worker who had been hurt
during the collapse of a separate cell phone tower located on the same
site. He and three other fire fighters were dragging the injured
maintenance worker out of the danger zone of the first collapsed tower
when a second tower collapsed and struck him as he attempted to run
away. He was transported to a local hospital where he was pronounced
dead. The initial tower collapse occurred during scheduled maintenance
to reinforce the tower.
Contributing Factors
- Sequential collapses of two cell phone towers
- Ineffective Incident Command
- Lack of situational awareness
- Lack of training for the specific incident response
- Lack of an Incident Safety Officer.
Key Recommendations
- Fire departments should develop, implement
and enforce an occupational safety and health program in accordance
with NFPA 1500 Standard for a Fire Department Occupational Safety and
Health Program
- Fire departments should ensure that the
incident commander conducts an initial size-up and risk assessment of
the incident scene before beginning operations, establishes a
stationary command post, maintains the role of director of the incident
scene and does not become involved in operations
- Fire departments should ensure that fire fighters are trained in situational awareness, personal safety, and accountability
- Fire departments should develop
pre-incident plans for deployment to technical rescue incidents and
conduct a risk benefit analysis for the deployment
- Fire departments should ensure that a
separate Incident Safety Officer, independent from the Incident
Commander, is appointed at technical rescue incidents
- Fire departments, especially volunteer
departments, should consider limiting their special operations
functions to those that they are properly trained and equipped for.