CHAPTER Ill, SECTION 5

SECTION 5
SAFETY
VEHICLE ACCIDENT DATA

INDUSTRIAL SAFETY.
Under the direction of the Safety Engineer

stationed at Elmer, the Safety Department has
as its main function and responsibility strict conformance to the high standards of safety and
health control required on all AEC projects. In
addition, the Department was responsible for the

Fire Prevention and Protection Program at all
sites.

The Safety Engineer and his staff also sup-

ported the representative of the American Inter-

national Underwriters, Inc., who represented the

insurance carrier on all matters pertaining to

workmen’s compensation.

(I July 1956 to 15 July 1958)

Average No. of Vehicles —.................222..-------388
Estimated Miles Driven ........................ 892,955

No. of Motor Vehicles Involved..................-.- 11
*Frequency Rate _....00000 vevenetseveseeeseees 1.23
Total Cost of Vehicle Damages............-... $2,317
*Disabling injuries per million man-hours
worked.
OCCUPATIONAL TIME LOST DATA
(1 July 1956 to 15 July 1958)

An active and continuous safety program was
maintained at all sites where H&N personnel
were assigned. Although Fred is under control
of the Military, safety activities continued to

Average No. of Employees.....................--- 2,492

tions at that site. At Johnston Island a situation

No. of Days Lost ...........02...220::ceeeeeeeee 4,718

encompass all Contractor personnel and operasimilar to that at Fred existed.

To assist new personnel in becoming ac-

quainted with Jobsite safety requirements and
some of the elements to be encountered, an in-

doctrination lecture was given upon their arrival. This type of programming invited safety
consciousness and served as a medium for accident control. Charts pinpointing the causes of
most accidents and showing which departments
were experiencing the greatest number of accidents in any particular category were distributed

to Supervision, creating a competitive spirit be-

tween departments and divisions which reduced

the number of accidents and resulted in an improved safety record. To assist further in evaluating trends relative

to accident frequency

during the build-up and operational period,

when increased hours of overtime were being
worked, the accident frequency charts were de-

signed to reflect hours of overtime worked by
department and division so that comparisons

could be made and necessary controls considered.
FIRE PROTECTION & PREVENTION.

The mobile fire protection equipment at
Elmer consisted of two F.W.D. 500-gpm fire
trucks, a Maxim 750-gpm fire truck used primarily for utility purposes, and a truck-mounted foam

unit; a Ford 500-gpm fire truck was located at
Nan. To meet the need for fire protection equip-

ment at all other sites as they were being acti-

vated, seven Willys 500-gpm fire trucks were

purchased which were more versatile and better

Total Man Hours Worked................ 9,080,207
No. of Lost Time Injuries .................2-...22...- 76
*Frequency Rate _...........0..:..cceeeceeeeeeee eee 8.37
**Severity Rate 2.0.0.0... ceceecccseneeee cece tees 520
*Disabling injuries per million man-hours

worked.

**Days charged per million man-hours worked.
Table No. 3-9.

Vehicle Accident Data.

adapted for small camp use than the larger
trucks.

The urgent need for additional salt water

for the distillation plant and the potential need
for additional fire protection at the POL area
resulted in the installation of a draft hydrant
close to the foam unit with the intake extending into the lagoon. This system was so
installed that foam was available immediately
should a fire occur in the POL area.

A new 10-inch salt water main for the fire

protection system was completed on both Elmer

and Fred. Additional fire hydrants were installed
in the industrial section and at the Deep Water
Pier. As recommended by the AEC Fire Prevention Engineer, 103 holes were cut through

the deck of the Deep Water Pier and were re-

cessed to allow metal covers to lay flush with
the deck of the pier. These holes were spaced

to allow maximum under-deck coverage by
cellar-type fire hose nozzles in case of an underdeck fire.
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