Eight work groups recognized by Southwest Electric Safety Exchange
Baton Rouge, La. – With
up to 34,500 volts of electricity moving across a typical power line, line
workers at electrical utilities face one of the most challenging work
environments in the world.
However, Entergy
Louisiana, LLC and Entergy Gulf States Louisiana, L.L.C. fight those challenges
by focusing on safety and several work groups in Louisiana have amassed
remarkable safety records that were recently recognized by the Southwest
Electric Safety Exchange.
In the Baton Rouge area,
employees in the Southern Distribution Operations Center and the Zachary network
received recognition for working 15 years without a lost-time accident.
Keith Ruddell, safety
specialist for Entergy Louisiana, accepted the awards on behalf of the company
at the recent SWESE semi-annual conference. Dennis Dawsey, vice president of
Louisiana distribution operations, presented the awards to the respective
managers around the state to share with their employees.
Louisiana distribution
operations received an award for working from July 20, 2005 through March 18,
2009 without a lost-time accident – a span of 8.7 million man-hours. The time
frame includes restoration work following the back-to-back strikes of hurricanes
Katrina and Rita in 2005 and Gustav and Ike last year.
The South Field Metering
group was recognized for working 60 years without a lost-time accident, while
the Lockport work group has reached 25 years of safety. The Jonesboro work group
has put together 30 years of safety while the Lockport work group has gone more
than 25 years without a lost-time accident. The West Monroe work group and the
West Construction work group were also recognized for 10 years of safe work.
Dawsey said these are
phenomenal achievements for which employees deserve to be recognized. He
emphasized that these milestones are a direct result of each individual putting
safety at the forefront of every decision.
"Safety is about putting
people first," Dawsey said. "These safety records are impressive and should be
celebrated, but what they really mean is that these workgroups looked out for
each other and themselves, and everyone went home safely.
"Not only should we work
safely for the benefit of our customers," he added, "but family, friends and
loved ones are counting on us to come home each day. Let’s remember those
reasons before we begin working so we will be sure to stay accident free."
Founded in 1950, the
Exchange began to reduce the accident rate among electric utility workers. The
initial meeting included a group of dedicated utility safety representatives
from southwestern Louisiana and southeastern Texas. Today, the Exchange
represents 15 utility companies in seven states.
Entergy’s Louisiana
utility companies serve more than one million customers through the operating
companies Entergy Louisiana, LLC and Entergy Gulf States Louisiana, L.L.C. With
operations in southern, central and northeastern Louisiana, the companies are
part of Entergy Corporation’s electric system serving 2.7 million customers in
Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi and Texas.
-30-
entergy-louisiana.com