Growing up as a kid on a cattle farm, my father made sure to warn me and my siblings about the hazards of the manure tanks. The essential message of getting stuck in the same space as manure meaning essentially death definitely left an impression on us, and we made it safely to adulthood. It's amazing how Employee #1 figured he could 'just quickly' fetch that hose. So many people don't seem to realise the danger of a situation until they're already in the process of passing out. Others only after they have been rescued.
Holy shit you couldn't say that last part enough. I read of a worker who died to a Hydrogen Sulfide leak (dead by the time you smell it basically). When he didn't come home later that night the wife just tried to rush in and save him but she also got overwhelmed by the gas. So many people are in such a rush to help someone they know/love they completely skip logical thought.
C est le sulfure d hydrogène qui rend le fumier,le purin aussi dangereux, surtout dans un espace confiné comme la tonne a lisier, bien des gens n y pensent pas, et malheureusement des gens en sont morts déjà.
@@JimsEquipmentShed We shouldn't disparage the employee. They were not given the knowledge that would ensure their safety. That is the employer's responsibility. It's easy to assume such things are common knowledge but assumptions can get people killed(as what nearly happened here).
I see that happen time and time again in after accident reports. "Worker thought he could go in quickly to retrieve an object in a confined space. Worker quickly passes out in confined space. Worker dies in confined space." If this guy would have betted on the lottery instead of getting into the manure tank, he would have won!
I've been doing underground construction for 10 years and just experienced my first low oxygen atmosphere last week. H2S and Carbon Monoxide are common for us, but low oxygen is rare. We had to Vacuum test a new sewer manhole which means entering the manhole, inserting plugs into the pipes below and attaching a suction disc to the top and removing all the air from the manhole. After the test was over, without thinking I went down into the manhole to retrieve the plugs. Immediately I knew something was wrong. I instinctively jumped back on the ladder and climbed out. We had a blower and a gas detector right next to us. It just slipped my mind, it happened so fast. Had that been an apprentice or someone less experienced with underground operations that went down, we would have had a recovery situation on our hands. Stupidest thing I've done in my career.
Stupidest thing I've done (by the standards of others) is ride a 300 ft chain hoist to the top of a wind turbine 😄down low or up high we are all dumb at some point
Yeah I was holding my breathe the entire time thinking worker 1 may not make it out alive since he practically got drowned in the liquid manure and for quite a while too
Coming from the oil field I can tell you poisonous gas in a confined space rarely kills just one 90% of the time even after having training when someone watches a person pass out and fall through into a hatch they immediately try to look into the hatch to see if the person's okay which usually leads to two people falling dead into a hatch
@@doggodoggo3000 Mate if there's an H2S leak out there, and you see a guy go from standing, to out flat on the ground, he's 99.9% going to be, or already is dead.
Dang, that sounds scary. So what's the procedure in this scenario when someone falls into a hatch. Because it's hard to ignore our common sense to try and rescue the victim as soon as possible
Oh this is one of the very happy stories. On another farm a family member went into a confined space (septic tank i think) to repair something. He fell over so the next two members went in to rescue... also went unconscious in there without retrieving the body and just like that, on a normal day 3 of your folks are getting pulled out dead by rescue workers. There are some very interesting but brutal case studies of this online from ohsa and other parties
This has happened too many times with Farmers and across industry as a whole, I remember a recent-ish one in Ireland where I think a father and two sons or cousins died in a similar scenario. Confined spaces are death traps if you don't treat them seriously. Use proper breathing apparatus and have a top man/team at all times.
Be the last to do the worst riskiest job! Just don’t go there! Save your life. Find someone trained, expert and experienced to do that stuff. Yes it costs money.
A proper gas monitor is what's needed. Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S) and Carbon Monoxide (CO) can and will kill you. Worked in sewers for years and I wouldn't set foot in any confined space without one.
@@charbelnakad7668 Thats not a confined space, OSHA guidelines stipulate that it must have 3 characteristics of which the scenario you put foward would fulfill, however under your bed would not have "the potential to contain a hazardous atmosphere" that would pose an immediate threat to human life.
I had no idea. I've had a manure spreader on my farm working, and I've worked at others farms in BC where there are spreaders and pits. Glad I watched this. I feel for the farmer getting lambasted with fines and charges. I am glad the workers all got out.
nightmare! so many men have died from thinking if they enter & exit quickly or "hold their breath" they can do the job faster WITHOUT those pesky safety precautions.
My son is a professional in this field and the kit he uses is awesome. Your home is also a confined space which is why when using certain products you should open windows BEFORE you start to do so
Reminds of a tragic story here in the UK a few years back when a farm worker fell into a slurry tank passed out and his family members tried to recover him and they got into difficulty as well!! I think all 3 died sadly including a father and son ☹️☹️
In all my CSE training classes manure pits was always mentioned. I’ve been Cse certified for the past 40 years. Retired now and don’t have to do it anymore
I have common sense. That's all the training I need not to crawl into an enclosed space - especially not a tank filled with liquid shit. You don't get paid enough to do that. No one does. Not even $1,000,000 could tempt me. Only one way in and out, and at any moment you could get drowned in shitm
Honestly Worker 2 seemed to know his stuff, held his breath to get a look knew he couldn't get him out alone to backed out till he had help. I think a lot of people would have tried to pull him out alone and would have also passed out making it even worse.
A few years ago, I saw a similar situation in a neighboring village. Father was the owner of a restaurant. He and his three sons were putting the restaurant in order, it turned out that the sewers needed to be cleaned. Father went down first. He didn't come out. Then the eldest son, and then the middle son. The youngest son realized that something was wrong and called the rescuers. Only the youngest son remained alive in the family.
People need to pay a professional to do these jobs. But they have debts piled up high and bills and life is hard so they try to do the super human and take ridiculous risks and get killed.
There is an uptick in entering confined spaces in the manure handling industry due to the use of sand bedding. Sand settles in tankers and storage facilities and in many cases if agitation systems fail the sand will plug inlets to pump systems forcing someone to enter to clear passages. Sand is the best bedding for cattle but the absolute worst for manure handling equipment.
@@Yora21 Some way to pump air into the interior would seem to be a vital need. On the other hand one wouldn't want to inadvertently trigger an explosion by turning on the air pump, as when the cavity might be filled with a sufficient concentration of methane.
@@colossalbreackerbut they almost became additional victims themselves. All too often would be rescuers have died attempting to rescue those who are trapped in confined spaces.
I was taught when I was six year old to never get close up to the manure pits on farms, and under no circumstances ever climb down the ladder even to rescue someone. Anyone working with these tanks really should have known that these are deathtraps.
Farmers also expect people to have common sense. If if you're an average joe with no farming experience, you should be able to read the signs that not only face the driver, but also are placed near the hatch, that entering this space can and will kill you.
@@owenater0780NO! NO! If a farmer is employing anyone or getting them to do what he won’t do and he does not actively explain the dangers, procedures, safety procedures, risks, he is criminally negligent and risking the life of his worker. So wash your hands if that responsibility- you can’t.
I worked on road tankers for a few years and confined space work was always treated as being extremely dangerous. Especially when it came to adequate ventilation for fumes, you'd have a fan circulating fresh air into the tank for hours and active ventilation was required to be in place while any personnel were inside. Passing out from fumes was a major hazard.
Probably Carbon Dioxide. Since the body prioritizes moving carbon dioxide out of the blood stream before moving oxygen into the blood, a high concentration of CO2 means that you can't take up any oxygen even though you are breathing normally. And the first symptom of oxygen deprivation is that you lose your ability to realize anything is wrong. CO2 is released by a lot of decomposition as many bacteria exhale it just the way like humans do. And it's heavier than oxygen so it sinks to the bottom, forming large odorless clouds near the floor. Even slight movements in the air mix it up with the rest of the air, so it's not a problem. But in confined spaces like big tanks or basements it can all sink to the bottom.
@@Yora21 Methane is more likely. It's more dangerous than CO2 in a sense that human have a defensive reaction to high concentration of CO2. You'll feel chest pain and some other symptoms like dizziness. But a low oxygen environment, like methane or nitrogen for example, don't trigger that reaction and you will pass out before you realised you are in danger. Obviously at extremely high concentration you might pass out too fast to react, Carbon dioxide or not.
This has happened down a manhole , one worker passed out ,next worker went in to help, passed out ,third worker entered he to passed out , unfortunately they all perished. Confined spaces are bad news.
It's deceptive how safe it appears. The 1,2,3 thing happens a lot. In 3rd world countries, they don't even tell their neighbors what happened and it just keeps happening.
The real joke is from when I did "confined spaces" training, was the answer to my question "Okay, say someone does pass out inside one of those tanks with baffles that you have to squeeze through. How do you rescue them?" "Oh well that should be worked out in the safety meeting before hand." "Yeah, ideally, but what exactly would that entail?" "Don't worry about that, that'll be worked out beforehand." "BY WHO?! Isn't that what we're here for NOW to learn about???"
Honestly brother…. Who ever heard of a farmer doing proper training with his workers? Never heard of them really doing any training…. Just act like super man and trick a younger worker to go in to a dangerous tank and hope he comes out alive…
Where are there respiratory apparatus and where was the tank watch for the worker one and two when they entered the first time? Employers must take responsibility to train there employees...That is high risk.
It's good that Worker 1 didn't die, but we didn't hear about how serious his injuries were. Brain cells die FAST in a low-oxygen environment. Irreversible cell death takes, what, 5 minutes? Depending on how long he was down there, he's likely going to need assistance for the rest of his life. Such a shame - this didn't need to happen. Was the rubber hose bit fit for work? Shouldn't there have been a grate or something over the entrance so the rubber bit doesn't just fall in like that?
When you are dealing with cattle manure constantly, you'd be amazed at how quickly you become so used to the smell if it, you actually don't smell it anymore. A few hours working and you don't smell it
Confined spaces was one of the cardinal safety rules at Michelin plant I worked at. You needed to have proper permit and follow all safety procedures for entering a confined space. If you did not... you were escorted to the gate and terminated on the spot.
Years ago when a new bypass was being built near hoyland in south yorkshire a father and son died in a confined space ( a drainage man hole ) the son collapsed and his father went in to rescue him , both died
I know there are some people watching this and shaking their heads thinking that it should be common sense or “that was stupid” etc, but you wouldn’t think or know about the hazards without training. On the other hand, if you make your living working in Plants/Refineries like I do, you get more training than you can tolerate about the dangers of confined spaces since “we” have to enter tanks and vessels regularly. Even for a quick, 5 minute job like this one you need someone to be a hole watch (with a radio in communication with emergency services) , an LEL monitor (measures oxygen levels among other gases that are lethal/flammable/reactive) and since it looks like air cannot be continuously circulated in there, a mask that is connected to a system to provide fresh air. But it always makes me realize that after of years working on these kinds of sites how it has completely changed my mentality and i see a lot of things with safety in mind
This is a danger that has been killing people for centuries. The Sheahan Memorial, Burgh Quay, Hawkins Street, Dublin is inscribed 'This memorial was erected in memory of Patrick Sheehan, a constable in the Dublin Metropolitan Police force who lost his life on the sixth day of May 1905 in a noble and self-sacrificing effort to rescue John Fleming who had in the discharge of his duties descended the main sewer close by this spot and was overcome by sewer gas. It was also intended to commemorate the bravery of a number of other citizens who also descended the sewer assisting in rescuing the before mentioned, thereby risking their own lives to save those of their fellow men.'
The safety instructions on the outside of the tank were in English and FRENCH??? How about in Spanish since there are so many Spanish-speaking farm workers today and have been for many years in the past.
Ralph Nader would have had a few more things to add. How come there was a detachable rubber end to the filling with no positive retaining clip? Caravans and trailers along with many other loose parts are required to have safety chains or safety wires to prevent detachment. Why was there no strainer grill to prevent the ingress of items that would have been hazardous to a pump? Was the rubber really a hazard to the pump in the first place? Shouldn't the pump have had its own grill to protect it from potentially destructive items? And logically how was it possible for the rubber to migrate from the filling end to the far end of the tank? These are all design failures of the equipment that could have been rectified. As most toxic gases are heavier than air it should be possible to vent the tank with a low level opening. Permitting fresh air to enter from the top and stale air to leave from the bottom. Obviously improved with a power ventilation. Perhaps even with a safety lockout so the grill I describe could NOT be opened unless the vent was also fully opened first. This sort of thing was adopted by railways 170 years ago. Called "fail safe procedures" and "interlocking". It is all very well to blame the management but that is "passing the buck". Make things safe in the first place. Prevent obvious risks. Then adopt safe working procedures.
its interesting how i get this video recommended to me after watching the better call saul episode with nacho in the oil tank truck. Considering I have never seen that event take place on my life, its good timing to suggest shortly after on youtube.
You may have heard of never dive alone.The reason being it's a safety precaution.Well in confined spaces you need 2 people.The 2nd person never enters a confined space to rescue another.Reason being he will suffer the same fate as the 1st person.Instead he calls emergency services.
This is one of those things that growing up on a farm or working on one that you just know, it is advertised consistently in farming circles... they literally run campaigns highlighting the dangers off slurry gases... it's basically the same as telling a child once not to stick things in electrical outlets... some just do it anyways.
There's not much scarier than being near the brink of passing out from an oxygen issue. Whether it's a situation like this or a chemical in the air or whatever it may be. I had a situation with bleach a year ago and that was scary stuff man.
That is considered a confined space and the worker should have been certified by osha to enter confined spaces, huge violation of osha for permitting to happen....I worked many refinery jobs and there has to be air monitoring and also additional workers assististing the worker entering the space...
If you absolutely have to do something like this and need to quickly go in and out of a small confined space, always take a deep breath first before going in and hold your breath. Hypoxia takes a lot longer to set in when you're holding your breath as opposed to when you're actively trying to breathe while in a oxygen-deprived environment.
The risk and cost for emergency extraction in that situation is unnecessary and completely avoidable. Any company with confined spaces that require cleaning at any point should be legally obligated to supply and train their employees to use personal ventilation equipment, with minimum fines for not complying that would significantly deter non-compliance. Absolutely inexcusable.
There was a mass drowning at a pool party where they dumped a bunch of dry ice in the pool to make it fog up. The cold CO2 gas hung over the pool where the swimmers couldn't lift themselves high enough to breathe. Our brains and bodies are not wired to comprehend that cool fresh air isn't always breathable. We can't taste or smell oxygen, or the lack of it. It's a sneaky killer when the atmosphere silently pushes is out of your environment.
I don’t think you could pay me any amount of money enter a liquid manure spreader tank. Worker 1 is a very dedicated employee.
he entered without any thought, least thought about money.
No shit.
Way too much of a "shit needs to get done" attitude
Yup. Not a snowball’s chance in hell you could get me to go in. I can’t stand that stench.
All too many go to the grocery store with no regard to what was done to put food on the table for them.
Growing up as a kid on a cattle farm, my father made sure to warn me and my siblings about the hazards of the manure tanks. The essential message of getting stuck in the same space as manure meaning essentially death definitely left an impression on us, and we made it safely to adulthood.
It's amazing how Employee #1 figured he could 'just quickly' fetch that hose. So many people don't seem to realise the danger of a situation until they're already in the process of passing out. Others only after they have been rescued.
Worker one must have grown up mining bit coins….. no way I’d go in there.
Holy shit you couldn't say that last part enough. I read of a worker who died to a Hydrogen Sulfide leak (dead by the time you smell it basically). When he didn't come home later that night the wife just tried to rush in and save him but she also got overwhelmed by the gas. So many people are in such a rush to help someone they know/love they completely skip logical thought.
C est le sulfure d hydrogène qui rend le fumier,le purin aussi dangereux, surtout dans un espace confiné comme la tonne a lisier, bien des gens n y pensent pas, et malheureusement des gens en sont morts déjà.
@@JimsEquipmentShed We shouldn't disparage the employee. They were not given the knowledge that would ensure their safety. That is the employer's responsibility. It's easy to assume such things are common knowledge but assumptions can get people killed(as what nearly happened here).
I see that happen time and time again in after accident reports. "Worker thought he could go in quickly to retrieve an object in a confined space. Worker quickly passes out in confined space. Worker dies in confined space." If this guy would have betted on the lottery instead of getting into the manure tank, he would have won!
2:29 - I'm surprised Worker #3 was willing help after being flipped the bird!
Loooool
You flip the bird to get their attention! Then solicit their help as they come to kick your butt.
Lmaoo
Yeh that was very rude of worker 2
As I used to tell my dad - you want help but you use the belt
Wow a safety training video that didn’t end with someone dying, this is rare
I've been doing underground construction for 10 years and just experienced my first low oxygen atmosphere last week. H2S and Carbon Monoxide are common for us, but low oxygen is rare. We had to Vacuum test a new sewer manhole which means entering the manhole, inserting plugs into the pipes below and attaching a suction disc to the top and removing all the air from the manhole. After the test was over, without thinking I went down into the manhole to retrieve the plugs. Immediately I knew something was wrong. I instinctively jumped back on the ladder and climbed out. We had a blower and a gas detector right next to us. It just slipped my mind, it happened so fast. Had that been an apprentice or someone less experienced with underground operations that went down, we would have had a recovery situation on our hands. Stupidest thing I've done in my career.
Glad you made it out safely. Close call.
Stupidest thing I've done (by the standards of others) is ride a 300 ft chain hoist to the top of a wind turbine 😄down low or up high we are all dumb at some point
glad to hear you made it out okay
Quick question - how many women do your kind of job?
Glad to hear you made it out OK. Ive had a couple close calls myself. The important thing is you are alive to tell others about it.
The quality of these videos has gone up so much over the past couple years.
Unfortunately it is from real incidents and lives.
@@dantruong2582 some people are just naturally selected to be a safety video.
@@alexmills1329 fr
@@dantruong2582
@@JaxonWX this why I’ll never work a job I don’t wana end up as a new warning sign
thats terrible. glad they survived
yeah
In Ireland I’m sure there were a few boys who died going in after the dog fell in. Slurry tank
I’d say pretty shitty.
he said they've all perished. that means they died afterwards.
Yeah I was holding my breathe the entire time thinking worker 1 may not make it out alive since he practically got drowned in the liquid manure and for quite a while too
I love hearing accountability trickle up.
Coming from the oil field I can tell you poisonous gas in a confined space rarely kills just one 90% of the time even after having training when someone watches a person pass out and fall through into a hatch they immediately try to look into the hatch to see if the person's okay which usually leads to two people falling dead into a hatch
yea ive heard alot of stories like that from oil workers. "if you see a guy laying down in the field, don't go see if hes okay." kind of stories.
@@doggodoggo3000 Mate if there's an H2S leak out there, and you see a guy go from standing, to out flat on the ground, he's 99.9% going to be, or already is dead.
H2S is some serious stuff, especially in high concentrations.
Dang, that sounds scary. So what's the procedure in this scenario when someone falls into a hatch. Because it's hard to ignore our common sense to try and rescue the victim as soon as possible
Take some punctuation classes man.
Oh this is one of the very happy stories. On another farm a family member went into a confined space (septic tank i think) to repair something. He fell over so the next two members went in to rescue... also went unconscious in there without retrieving the body and just like that, on a normal day 3 of your folks are getting pulled out dead by rescue workers.
There are some very interesting but brutal case studies of this online from ohsa and other parties
This has happened too many times with Farmers and across industry as a whole, I remember a recent-ish one in Ireland where I think a father and two sons or cousins died in a similar scenario.
Confined spaces are death traps if you don't treat them seriously. Use proper breathing apparatus and have a top man/team at all times.
Man, that's no way to go. Not even for politicians and twitch streamers
@@MisterHeroman actually, that sounds perfect for politicians. Twitch streamers just need some socialization skills....
@@MisterHeroman I can think of a few politicians and twitch streamers
@@MisterHeroman "Not even for politicians and twitch streamers"
Seems really out of place.
Never in a million years would I get the idea to climb inside a manure spreader tank.
Sh1tloads of people died painting empty tanks.
The fumes paint released as it dried.
@@r30413 imagine for $12/hr. God.
Toxicity or not. I'm not climbing inside a manure tank. Period. Sorry boss.
Be the last to do the worst riskiest job! Just don’t go there! Save your life. Find someone trained, expert and experienced to do that stuff. Yes it costs money.
What If There was 500 thousand dollars at the farthest end.
Never NEVER enter a confined space without an oxygen detector, simple as that
A proper gas monitor is what's needed. Hydrogen Sulfide (H2S) and Carbon Monoxide (CO) can and will kill you. Worked in sewers for years and I wouldn't set foot in any confined space without one.
does this include underneeth my bed
@@charbelnakad7668 yes, keep your flatulences in mind!
@@charbelnakad7668 Thats not a confined space, OSHA guidelines stipulate that it must have 3 characteristics of which the scenario you put foward would fulfill, however under your bed would not have "the potential to contain a hazardous atmosphere" that would pose an immediate threat to human life.
a pretty shite rule to be honest. not all confined spaces are literal shittanks
This reminded me of the classic "Two Breaths To..." safety video made by the US Dept. of Energy. Great video.
Link for those interested: ruclips.net/video/jNsKGx94_KE/видео.html
@@jaromirlatal177 thank you.
I had no idea. I've had a manure spreader on my farm working, and I've worked at others farms in BC where there are spreaders and pits. Glad I watched this. I feel for the farmer getting lambasted with fines and charges. I am glad the workers all got out.
As a young child I lost consciousness due to exposure to manure. My dad was a farmer.
I thought you were going to say your father was a politician.
@@MrSatyre1 what you mean by that? Politician didn't deal with manure they deal with something more stinkier shit that just simple manure
@@anonymousstout4759 yep, worse than manure - human shit
@@anonymousstout4759 Cause politicians are "shit".
cool story bro 👍
I'm glad everyone is ok. My buddy Zach needs to see this video.
Did you show the video to Zach yet?
I studied for quality assurance technician and as an auditor I have to check all of these stuff, these videos are gold!
3 people from my area died in this exact way, 2 tried to save 1 and 3 tried to save 2. Terrible tragedy.
nightmare! so many men have died from thinking if they enter & exit quickly or "hold their breath" they can do the job faster WITHOUT those pesky safety precautions.
Yeah being a super man. That’s a fantasy.
Aw man these guys be working dangerous jobs, as well as many others. Respect!
My son is a professional in this field and the kit he uses is awesome. Your home is also a confined space which is why when using certain products you should open windows BEFORE you start to do so
Very important point! Thanks!
Reminds of a tragic story here in the UK a few years back when a farm worker fell into a slurry tank passed out and his family members tried to recover him and they got into difficulty as well!! I think all 3 died sadly including a father and son ☹️☹️
In all my CSE training classes manure pits was always mentioned. I’ve been Cse certified for the past 40 years. Retired now and don’t have to do it anymore
I am CSA certified. That’s all the training needed to say “nope. Not going in there.”
I have common sense. That's all the training I need not to crawl into an enclosed space - especially not a tank filled with liquid shit.
You don't get paid enough to do that. No one does. Not even $1,000,000 could tempt me. Only one way in and out, and at any moment you could get drowned in shitm
Honestly Worker 2 seemed to know his stuff, held his breath to get a look knew he couldn't get him out alone to backed out till he had help. I think a lot of people would have tried to pull him out alone and would have also passed out making it even worse.
The animations look extremely well done 👍
Muy peligroso, que bien que los trabajadores pudieron salir con vida. Buen video.
Always a good day when worksafebc uploads.
A few years ago, I saw a similar situation in a neighboring village. Father was the owner of a restaurant. He and his three sons were putting the restaurant in order, it turned out that the sewers needed to be cleaned. Father went down first. He didn't come out. Then the eldest son, and then the middle son. The youngest son realized that something was wrong and called the rescuers. Only the youngest son remained alive in the family.
People need to pay a professional to do these jobs. But they have debts piled up high and bills and life is hard so they try to do the super human and take ridiculous risks and get killed.
There is an uptick in entering confined spaces in the manure handling industry due to the use of sand bedding. Sand settles in tankers and storage facilities and in many cases if agitation systems fail the sand will plug inlets to pump systems forcing someone to enter to clear passages. Sand is the best bedding for cattle but the absolute worst for manure handling equipment.
Probably another case of money saving methods that cause danger elsewhere….
Good thing our manure spreader is the type where the entire backside is the big hatch so you can give it plenty of air out before cleaning
The ability to vent them should be mandatory in all tanks that are produced and sold. The design here looks like a deathtrap.
@@Yora21 Some way to pump air into the interior would seem to be a vital need. On the other hand one wouldn't want to inadvertently trigger an explosion by turning on the air pump, as when the cavity might be filled with a sufficient concentration of methane.
Workers 1,2 and 3 are lucky the aren’t bodies 1,2 and3.
yeah, but they saved his life.
@@colossalbreackerbut they almost became additional victims themselves. All too often would be rescuers have died attempting to rescue those who are trapped in confined spaces.
I was taught when I was six year old to never get close up to the manure pits on farms, and under no circumstances ever climb down the ladder even to rescue someone.
Anyone working with these tanks really should have known that these are deathtraps.
You know why they told you that? Because a group of people had to die to find that out. Crazy
How do you cure a person who has got sick with nausea from manure contamination in their hands while doing gardening?
Their definition of confined spaces makes me claustrophobic lol
Reading safety measures is very necessary for such works.
Farmers are the first people to send their employees into incredibly dangerous situations with nothing more than a "Be careful".
Farmers also expect people to have common sense. If if you're an average joe with no farming experience, you should be able to read the signs that not only face the driver, but also are placed near the hatch, that entering this space can and will kill you.
How do you know?
@@owenater0780NO! NO! If a farmer is employing anyone or getting them to do what he won’t do and he does not actively explain the dangers, procedures, safety procedures, risks, he is criminally negligent and risking the life of his worker. So wash your hands if that responsibility- you can’t.
Even without any prior experience with farm equipment, I can tell that entering a confined space with a ton of shit is a bad idea
They should know not to go into a methane-filled tank without proper precautions and training.
Need more of these Videos
I worked on road tankers for a few years and confined space work was always treated as being extremely dangerous. Especially when it came to adequate ventilation for fumes, you'd have a fan circulating fresh air into the tank for hours and active ventilation was required to be in place while any personnel were inside. Passing out from fumes was a major hazard.
Thanks for letting me know what to do when I’m in manure spreader this weekend! ❤❤
had no idea how deadly it was in there
Probably Carbon Dioxide. Since the body prioritizes moving carbon dioxide out of the blood stream before moving oxygen into the blood, a high concentration of CO2 means that you can't take up any oxygen even though you are breathing normally. And the first symptom of oxygen deprivation is that you lose your ability to realize anything is wrong.
CO2 is released by a lot of decomposition as many bacteria exhale it just the way like humans do. And it's heavier than oxygen so it sinks to the bottom, forming large odorless clouds near the floor. Even slight movements in the air mix it up with the rest of the air, so it's not a problem. But in confined spaces like big tanks or basements it can all sink to the bottom.
@@Yora21 Methane is more likely. It's more dangerous than CO2 in a sense that human have a defensive reaction to high concentration of CO2. You'll feel chest pain and some other symptoms like dizziness. But a low oxygen environment, like methane or nitrogen for example, don't trigger that reaction and you will pass out before you realised you are in danger. Obviously at extremely high concentration you might pass out too fast to react, Carbon dioxide or not.
@@minhducnguyen9276 don't forget H2S. It won't even let you linger long enough to have second thoughts.
This explains why I lose consciousness at the truck stop lunch counter.
Wake up babe a new WorkSafeBC vid dropped
Thank you very much for sharing this helpful information
This has happened down a manhole , one worker passed out ,next worker went in to help, passed out ,third worker entered he to passed out , unfortunately they all perished. Confined spaces are bad news.
Too common of a thing.
It's deceptive how safe it appears. The 1,2,3 thing happens a lot. In 3rd world countries, they don't even tell their neighbors what happened and it just keeps happening.
Legend has it that worker 1 was Biff Howard Tannen
2:28 that is NOT a wave by worker #2
He came out squeaky clean. Impressive!
As skilled labor these videos are a great reminder
Good to know.
Thank you.
The real joke is from when I did "confined spaces" training, was the answer to my question "Okay, say someone does pass out inside one of those tanks with baffles that you have to squeeze through. How do you rescue them?"
"Oh well that should be worked out in the safety meeting before hand."
"Yeah, ideally, but what exactly would that entail?"
"Don't worry about that, that'll be worked out beforehand."
"BY WHO?! Isn't that what we're here for NOW to learn about???"
Honestly brother…. Who ever heard of a farmer doing proper training with his workers?
Never heard of them really doing any training….
Just act like super man and trick a younger worker to go in to a dangerous tank and hope he comes out alive…
One day, this video will be the mediation task in our english exam, for sure.
Where are there respiratory apparatus and where was the tank watch for the worker one and two when they entered the first time? Employers must take responsibility to train there employees...That is high risk.
Excellent video, great job WorkSafe!
just one breath can make you lose consciousness. because when it's got ya, it's got ya
I’m glad everyone made it out ok, usually doesn’t go that way
It's good that Worker 1 didn't die, but we didn't hear about how serious his injuries were.
Brain cells die FAST in a low-oxygen environment. Irreversible cell death takes, what, 5 minutes?
Depending on how long he was down there, he's likely going to need assistance for the rest of his life. Such a shame - this didn't need to happen.
Was the rubber hose bit fit for work? Shouldn't there have been a grate or something over the entrance so the rubber bit doesn't just fall in like that?
I love this channel
"Worker 1 told worker 2 that he was going to fish the peice out"
made me laugh histerically
I am glad that the error is directed to The Company and its training program, and not on the worker trying to do his job
.
Wow... So glad they survived 😢❤
Thanks for this video!
it's not just about bad smells, it's about noxious gases
Do you watch the video?
When you are dealing with cattle manure constantly, you'd be amazed at how quickly you become so used to the smell if it, you actually don't smell it anymore. A few hours working and you don't smell it
He shook hands with danger.
Confined spaces was one of the cardinal safety rules at Michelin plant I worked at. You needed to have proper permit and follow all safety procedures for entering a confined space. If you did not... you were escorted to the gate and terminated on the spot.
Years ago when a new bypass was being built near hoyland in south yorkshire a father and son died in a confined space ( a drainage man hole ) the son collapsed and his father went in to rescue him , both died
thank you very much!
This is an official "aw sh*t" moment.
Why did I just spend almost 5 minutes watching the danger of entering a manure tank. 😂
Thanks for your sharing
I know there are some people watching this and shaking their heads thinking that it should be common sense or “that was stupid” etc, but you wouldn’t think or know about the hazards without training.
On the other hand, if you make your living working in Plants/Refineries like I do, you get more training than you can tolerate about the dangers of confined spaces since “we” have to enter tanks and vessels regularly.
Even for a quick, 5 minute job like this one you need someone to be a hole watch (with a radio in communication with emergency services) , an LEL monitor (measures oxygen levels among other gases that are lethal/flammable/reactive) and since it looks like air cannot be continuously circulated in there, a mask that is connected to a system to provide fresh air.
But it always makes me realize that after of years working on these kinds of sites how it has completely changed my mentality and i see a lot of things with safety in mind
Critical factor no 3 - rubber hose attachment is not properly tightened
There should be vents on the top. I dont know why not? and also digital displays showing air status with warning.
I think for safety they should have a total of three hatches on top of the spreader to vent the liquid manure tank
you could not pay me enough to go into a manure tank even if they were not a death trap
why not use mesh???
on top of container
This is a danger that has been killing people for centuries. The Sheahan Memorial, Burgh Quay, Hawkins Street, Dublin is inscribed 'This memorial was erected in memory of Patrick Sheehan, a constable in the Dublin Metropolitan Police force who lost his life on the sixth day of May 1905 in a noble and self-sacrificing effort to rescue John Fleming who had in the discharge of his duties descended the main sewer close by this spot and was overcome by sewer gas. It was also intended to commemorate the bravery of a number of other citizens who also descended the sewer assisting in rescuing the before mentioned, thereby risking their own lives to save those of their fellow men.'
The safety instructions on the outside of the tank were in English and FRENCH??? How about in Spanish since there are so many Spanish-speaking farm workers today and have been for many years in the past.
Ralph Nader would have had a few more things to add. How come there was a detachable rubber end to the filling with no positive retaining clip? Caravans and trailers along with many other loose parts are required to have safety chains or safety wires to prevent detachment. Why was there no strainer grill to prevent the ingress of items that would have been hazardous to a pump? Was the rubber really a hazard to the pump in the first place? Shouldn't the pump have had its own grill to protect it from potentially destructive items? And logically how was it possible for the rubber to migrate from the filling end to the far end of the tank? These are all design failures of the equipment that could have been rectified. As most toxic gases are heavier than air it should be possible to vent the tank with a low level opening. Permitting fresh air to enter from the top and stale air to leave from the bottom. Obviously improved with a power ventilation. Perhaps even with a safety lockout so the grill I describe could NOT be opened unless the vent was also fully opened first. This sort of thing was adopted by railways 170 years ago. Called "fail safe procedures" and "interlocking". It is all very well to blame the management but that is "passing the buck".
Make things safe in the first place. Prevent obvious risks. Then adopt safe working procedures.
its interesting how i get this video recommended to me after watching the better call saul episode with nacho in the oil tank truck. Considering I have never seen that event take place on my life, its good timing to suggest shortly after on youtube.
how much you want to bet he said "ah shit" right before he passed out?
im glad he made it out alive.
You may have heard of never dive alone.The reason being it's a safety precaution.Well in confined spaces you need 2 people.The 2nd person never enters a confined space to rescue another.Reason being he will suffer the same fate as the 1st person.Instead he calls emergency services.
Good tip
I cant imagine a farmer actually training anyone on safety procedures.
This is one of those things that growing up on a farm or working on one that you just know, it is advertised consistently in farming circles... they literally run campaigns highlighting the dangers off slurry gases... it's basically the same as telling a child once not to stick things in electrical outlets... some just do it anyways.
Shows how much you know about farming.
Then you clearly have met zero farmers
Moron.
In that case you have clearly never actually met a farmer
It is incredible they survived
There's not much scarier than being near the brink of passing out from an oxygen issue. Whether it's a situation like this or a chemical in the air or whatever it may be. I had a situation with bleach a year ago and that was scary stuff man.
That is considered a confined space and the worker should have been certified by osha to enter confined spaces, huge violation of osha for permitting to happen....I worked many refinery jobs and there has to be air monitoring and also additional workers assististing the worker entering the space...
In the end, workers will always think that they need to be a hero and jump in a rescue that little piece of rubber.
Thank god for Worker 1s bros!
Thanks RUclips algorithm, I'll never enter a manure tank now!
If you absolutely have to do something like this and need to quickly go in and out of a small confined space, always take a deep breath first before going in and hold your breath. Hypoxia takes a lot longer to set in when you're holding your breath as opposed to when you're actively trying to breathe while in a oxygen-deprived environment.
Basic health and safety! Working in confined spaces !
Oh RUclips algorithm, you’re being so silly again! 😂
Never ever get into a tank of any sort, even if you think that the product that was in there is gone
My neighbor was also killed in such a way. 3 dead and 1 critical
The most shocking this is that employee 1 survived
Glad they all made it!
The risk and cost for emergency extraction in that situation is unnecessary and completely avoidable. Any company with confined spaces that require cleaning at any point should be legally obligated to supply and train their employees to use personal ventilation equipment, with minimum fines for not complying that would significantly deter non-compliance. Absolutely inexcusable.
There was a mass drowning at a pool party where they dumped a bunch of dry ice in the pool to make it fog up. The cold CO2 gas hung over the pool where the swimmers couldn't lift themselves high enough to breathe. Our brains and bodies are not wired to comprehend that cool fresh air isn't always breathable. We can't taste or smell oxygen, or the lack of it. It's a sneaky killer when the atmosphere silently pushes is out of your environment.
Shouldn't there be at least one other hinged opening on the top similar to RxR tankers?
When I worked in Nebraska I nearly took a job doing this. My EX employers talked me out of it, saying I'd smell like poo