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CWA Survey Reveals 65% of Tower Technicians Have Witnessed Injury of a Coworker

CWA Survey Reveals 65% of Tower Technicians Have Witnessed Injury of a Coworker Image Credit: CWA

More than 65% of wireless tower technicians have been on a job site where someone has been injured and 4% where someone has been killed, according to a safety survey published by the Communications Workers of America’s Tower Climbers Union. The survey, the first ever conducted by and for tower technicians and completed by current wireless tower climbers, exposes a nearly universal lack of adequate safety rules and training by employers. Coupled with pressure to meet deadlines imposed by the wireless carriers and tower owners, and hazardous rules outside of workers’ control, the result is increasing injuries and incidents, many of which are never even investigated.

In response, wireless tower technicians who formed a union with CWA in May 2022 have launched a petition calling on the nation’s top telecom corporations to commit to improving safety standards and work conditions. These demands were elevated by CWA President Chris Shelton in letters sent to the CEOs of AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Dish, American Tower, SBA and Crown Castle, in which Shelton called out wireless carriers and tower owners for shirking the responsibility of ensuring worker safety through layers of contracting, and demanded a Tower Technicians’ Bill of Rights.

The survey finds that the overwhelming majority of respondents indicate that their employers impose rules or work requirements that can compromise safety, which the tower climbers have no say in. Tower owners such as American Tower, Crown Castle and SBA Communications allow or require work during dangerous weather (cited by nearly 73% of respondents) and at night (over 68%), installing equipment heavier than towers are designed to handle (over 47%), and forcing multiple crews to work on a tower at the same time (nearly 42%).

Additional key findings include:

  • Nearly 1 in 5 workers know someone who has been killed on the job
  • 1 in 4 workers have been on 5 or more job sites where someone has been injured
  • More than 77% of respondents have experienced wireless carriers imposing unrealistic deadlines for completing jobs
  • Close to 25% of respondents reported that safety incidents on the job were rarely or never investigated and, when they are investigated, “nothing happens” as a result of the investigation.

Wireless tower climbing is one of the deadliest jobs in the country, with tower climbers working hundreds of feet in the air. Despite this risk, over 31% of tower technicians reported in the survey that their employer does not provide short-term disability insurance and nearly 12% do not carry Workers’ Compensation insurance. Tower climbers lack these benefits, and a voice on the job, in part because they aren’t directly employed by the handful of large and immensely profitable wireless carriers and tower owners. Instead, tower technicians are generally employed by hundreds of small subcontractors, while the massive companies maintain control of their working conditions and deadlines.

The complete survey findings can be viewed at https://cwa-union.org/sites/default/files/2023-05/TCUCWASafetyReport.pdf

Tommy Schuch, a tower climber, forman, trainer and Rope Access Technician of 12 years and member of the Tower Climbers Union/CWA

As a worker in the telecom industry, I help connect thousands of people, family and businesses across the country. I love my job, though there are risks that come with this line of work. That risk is exacerbated by major telecom corporations, placing us in situations that remove our ability to speak up on safety issues that arise on job sites. The mentality in this industry of ‘If you do not get the job done, we will find someone that will’ has to stop, when it comes to our safety. Our work days typically last 12 to 15 hours, and sometimes up to 20 or more hours. Meanwhile, we’re facing increasing pressure to meet unrealistic deadlines enforced by the very wireless carriers and tower owners who refuse to be held accountable for our safety. It’s time these carriers stop putting us directly in harm’s way and start imposing common sense safety standards on the job.

CWA President Chris Shelton (in the letters)

Our country's wireless networks would not function properly without their labor. Yet, instead of taking responsibility for their working conditions, you have helped to create a network of contractors engaged in cutthroat competition that puts tower technicians at the bottom, their safety at risk, and far too often their very lives on the line

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Principle Analyst and Senior Editor | IP Networks

Ariana specializes in IP networking, covering both operator networks - core, transport, edge and access; and enterprise and cloud networks. Her work involves analysis of cutting-edge technologies that drive application visibility, traffic awareness, network optimization, network security, virtualization and cloud-native architectures.

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