This course is a requirement for an individual who is not a licensed rigger or a designated foreman of a licensed rigger to supervise the hoisting or lowering of articles on the outside of a building with hoisting equipment. In lieu of completing this course, an individual may instead possess a department approved national rigging certification.
Introduction to Cranes & Derricks
Include instruction on inspection, maintenance, repair, use, installation, hazards associated with the relevant sections of the building code and industry practice with regards to Rigging
Crane & RIGGING Accidents
• Common causes of accidents with cranes
• Historical crane accidents in NYC and other major cities
• Overview of rigging incident statistics for the most current 24-month period:
• Failure; injury; death. Close review of two failure scenarios with emphasis on
• what went wrong and how the incident could have been prevented.
Crane Setup
• Ground conditions
• Deviation from plans not permitted
• Founding of crane, outrigger placement and cribbing
• Danger to underground infrastructure, excavations, foundations, etc.
CFR 29 OSHA 1926 Overview
• Subparts: E (PPE-Personal Protective Equipment),
• H (Material Handling, Storage),
• K (Electrical),
• L (Scaffolds),
• M (Fall Protection)
Operating Crane
• Starting up the crane
• Hazards of operating in a dense urban environment
• High wind hazards
• Operating near power lines
• Prohibition against hoisting over pedestrians, traffic & adjoining buildings
• Requirements for shutting down and securing the crane
• Communication between workers & supervisors while rigging: radios; hand signals; flags; etc.
Reading Load Charts
• Chart understanding
• Multiple Equations
• Approved load chart reading criteria