http://www.newsobserver.com/business/story/1005331.htmlIn N.C., it's mostly up to crane company workers; state inspectors play a minor role
Dudley Price, Staff Writer
Giant tower cranes on the Triangle skyline used to signify only economic prosperity.
But a crane accident Saturday that killed seven people in New York raises the question: Could a similar tragedy happen here?
"Cranes are very safe, ...
it's just like airplanes," said Carl Hertag, national parts manager for Morrow Equipment of Oregon, which owns giant cranes and leases them throughout the country. "Most planes that crash are generally due to human error."
Hertag, who has worked in the industry for 38 years, said he had no firsthand knowledge of what caused the crane to fall across two Manhattan city blocks. Investigators are focusing on a massive steel collar which fell as workers were trying to attach the crane to a 19-story apartment building.
In North Carolina, government inspectors play only a minor role in keeping the complex machines safe. That job is mostly left to the crane owner, riggers who erect, extend and dismantle the cranes and the operator who is responsible for daily inspections.
"We don't have enough inspectors to look at every crane as it's set up," said Neal O'Briant, a spokesman for the state Department of Labor, which enforces federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration workplace safety rules. "We have 114 inspectors for 250,000 workplaces in North Carolina."
But few states require that crane operators be certified, and some argue that operators lack necessary training to make all the checks.
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