May is National Safe Digging Month!
National Fuel would like to remind homeowners to call 811, the national "Call Before You Dig" phone number, or visit
www.call811.com, prior to planning any excavation projects this year. Calling 811 prior to digging projects is required by New York State Law and can prevent accidental damage to underground utility lines.
The national phone number connects callers with a "One Call Center" in their area. Local "One Call Center" operators record the location of the excavation and then notify National Fuel of the caller's plans. National Fuel will then dispatch a professional locator to mark the approximate location of National Fuel's lines for free. Homeowners and contractors should call 811 at least two (2) business days in advance of the start of their project to allow time for the request to be processed. Once your project is underway and in observance of the markings, please remember that you are required to stop using heavy equipment and hand dig within two feet of the markings.
The 811 "Call Before You Dig" initiative is sponsored by the Common Ground Alliance (CGA), the leading association created specifically to work with
all industry stakeholders in an effort to prevent damage to underground utility infrastructure and ensure public safety and environmental protection. Officially formed in 2000, CGA represents a continuation of the United States Department of Transportation's Common Ground Study - a study that highlighted the need for one organization to continuously update best practices among the growing underground utility industry.
"All excavation projects require a call - even small projects like planting trees and shrubs, or installing a fence or mailbox," said Julie Coppola Cox, Assistant General Manager of Corporate Communications, National Fuel. "If you damage an underground utility line while digging, you run the risk of harming yourself or those around you, disrupting service to an entire neighborhood and potentially being held responsible for fines and repair costs."
In 2004, according to industry data, CGA estimates there were approximately 680,000 underground line strikes resulting in damages, including service outages and injury. A national survey conducted for CGA shows that confusion exists among the public as to the necessity of calling before every dig job. In the survey, only 35% of homeowners indicated they-or someone in their house-have called to have their utility lines marked in the past.