- Complete a risk assessment for each monitoring location covering height, water, and access hazards
- Wear a personal flotation device when working near reservoir edges and spillway channels
- Treat valve towers and outlet chambers as confined spaces with full permit procedures
- Install lightning protection on telemetry cabinets and weather stations in exposed locations
- Route cables securely across dam crests and slopes with protection from weather and traffic
- Use solar power systems where mains electricity is not available at remote dam sites
- Test every sensor and communication link end-to-end before accepting the installation
- Brief the team on the specific access hazards at each monitoring point on the dam
- Carry communication equipment that works in the remote dam location at all times
- Record all instrument locations, calibration data, and commissioning results accurately
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- DON'T access dam structures or spillways without a personal flotation device near water
- DON'T enter valve towers without confined space procedures and atmospheric monitoring
- DON'T install telemetry cabinets in lightning-prone locations without surge protection
- DON'T route cables where they will be damaged by maintenance vehicles or weather erosion
- DON'T work alone at remote dam sites without a lone working check-in procedure
- DON'T commission monitoring systems without testing every sensor and data path
- DON'T install instruments inaccurately — the data informs life-safety dam decisions
- DON'T leave open cable trenches on the dam crest where they weaken the structure
- DON'T access steep embankment slopes without assessing ground stability and using ropes
- DON'T skip the risk assessment because you have visited the dam location previously
See also: Dam and Reservoir Safety Awareness | Lone Working in Remote Locations
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