carbuff
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@carbuff I have wondered the same, only because I know a guy that went off a fishing boat on Lake MI, he was immediately rescued tho. He was in violent waters with the rudest winds ever, but his “rigging” took him overboard once he lost control of it.
Let’s just assume alcoholic beverages might have been involved here. It’d be very easy to have a “slip & fall”, maybe not going overboard, but seriously injured. I’m afraid not all crew members would want to report. Only because I think the captain/pilot of the watercraft might lose his job if he allowed an intoxicated person to work. Radioing the Coast Guard would be the only option for help, imo. So? Pitch him over? I’m going to speculate a whole lot of booze is involved in barge work, not by all, but by many.
(I’m trying to think of a situation requiring him to have the jack attached to chains, I guess only to maneuver it or retrieve it?) Idk
I was thinking he might have been working on deck with the jack when the chains came loose and he got tangled in the whole mess and taken overboard, with no wrongdoing necessary by anybody.
Is there a national agency that manages barge traffic and qualifications? Do the Coast Guard rules apply on rivers? Does anybody keep records of accidents? Are they covered by OSHA?
So many questions...