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New Jersey
Related: About this forumOSHA, police investigating worker death at radio tower in Atlantic City
Last edited Mon Dec 15, 2025, 05:48 AM - Edit history (1)
The Weekly Toll: How Workers Died Last Week
ByJordan Barab
Dec 8, 2025 #Arizona, #California, #Georgia, #Illinois, #Mississippi, #New Jersey, #Ohio, #Oklahoma, #Pennsylvania, #Tennessee, #Wisconsin
OSHA, police investigating worker death at radio tower in Atlantic City
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (WPVI) Several agencies are still investigating how a worker died on a 425-foot radio tower in Atlantic City on Thursday. On Friday, local police, fire and representatives from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) were back at the scene in Atlantic City. First thing you do is think about his family, said neighbor Jacob Ely. Thats a terrible way to go. Three police drones went up, surveying the tower and the work area. We had heard that they were supposed to dismantle that antenna, but they said something came loose and hit him, said Ely. It happened at Murray and Ohio Avenues in the Venice Park neighborhood. Atlantic City police say a crew from North Carolina was working on taking down a section at the top of the tower around 4:30 p.m. when a worker was injured.
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ByJordan Barab
Dec 8, 2025 #Arizona, #California, #Georgia, #Illinois, #Mississippi, #New Jersey, #Ohio, #Oklahoma, #Pennsylvania, #Tennessee, #Wisconsin
OSHA, police investigating worker death at radio tower in Atlantic City
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (WPVI) Several agencies are still investigating how a worker died on a 425-foot radio tower in Atlantic City on Thursday. On Friday, local police, fire and representatives from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) were back at the scene in Atlantic City. First thing you do is think about his family, said neighbor Jacob Ely. Thats a terrible way to go. Three police drones went up, surveying the tower and the work area. We had heard that they were supposed to dismantle that antenna, but they said something came loose and hit him, said Ely. It happened at Murray and Ohio Avenues in the Venice Park neighborhood. Atlantic City police say a crew from North Carolina was working on taking down a section at the top of the tower around 4:30 p.m. when a worker was injured.
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OSHA, police investigating worker death at radio tower in Atlantic City (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Dec 13
OP
Gin pole failure claims a tech's life on an Atlantic City tower, the 2nd fatality this week, the 6th this year
mahatmakanejeeves
Monday
#1
mahatmakanejeeves
(67,995 posts)1. Gin pole failure claims a tech's life on an Atlantic City tower, the 2nd fatality this week, the 6th this year
Gin pole failure claims a techs life on an Atlantic City tower, the 2nd fatality this week, the 6th this year
In Featured News by Wireless Estimator / December 5, 2025

Emergency personnel observe the rescue of a tower technician in Atlanta [sic] City, NJ. Still, the worker succumbed to his injuries at the scene, marking the latest fatality in an industry that is reeling from two deaths this week and six in 2025.
A 44-year-old tower technician died late yesterday afternoon in Atlantic City, N.J., after a gin pole reportedly failed while a crew was removing an abandoned FM pylon from atop a 347-foot self-supporting tower located off Murray Avenue, near the citys water-treatment plant.
Individuals familiar with the incident, who requested anonymity and declined to identify the technician or his employer pending formal notifications, said the three-person team on the tower was lowering the mast when the gin pole failed. The pole bent under load, they said, but did not detach from the tower but the pylons loadline snapped when the gin pole became compromised, possibly because it was side-loaded.
Despite heroic attempts by fellow climbers, the technician did not survive

OSHA will be investigating why the gin pole failed as the pylon was being removed. The rooster head apparently fell out of the top section of the pole, taking the load line with it. The bridle slings are still connected to the pole and the tower.
Immediately after the failure, two technicians noticed their colleague talking but faint, with no apparent signs of injury. They immediately began assisting him down the tower. At approximately the 200-foot level, one climber realized the technician had stopped breathing, and his partner called 911.
The pair then began CPR and continued their efforts in 30-degree temperatures for approximately an hour, performing resuscitation on the structure until first responders arrived and assisted in lowering the man to the ground. He was pronounced dead shortly thereafter. Their actions were a profound act of dedication under adverse conditions. ... OSHA is investigating and is on site today. ... Media outlets have incorrectly reported that the tower was 425 feet tall and that the deceaseds coworkers required rescue. Neither statement is accurate.
{snip}
In Featured News by Wireless Estimator / December 5, 2025

Emergency personnel observe the rescue of a tower technician in Atlanta [sic] City, NJ. Still, the worker succumbed to his injuries at the scene, marking the latest fatality in an industry that is reeling from two deaths this week and six in 2025.
A 44-year-old tower technician died late yesterday afternoon in Atlantic City, N.J., after a gin pole reportedly failed while a crew was removing an abandoned FM pylon from atop a 347-foot self-supporting tower located off Murray Avenue, near the citys water-treatment plant.
Individuals familiar with the incident, who requested anonymity and declined to identify the technician or his employer pending formal notifications, said the three-person team on the tower was lowering the mast when the gin pole failed. The pole bent under load, they said, but did not detach from the tower but the pylons loadline snapped when the gin pole became compromised, possibly because it was side-loaded.
Despite heroic attempts by fellow climbers, the technician did not survive

OSHA will be investigating why the gin pole failed as the pylon was being removed. The rooster head apparently fell out of the top section of the pole, taking the load line with it. The bridle slings are still connected to the pole and the tower.
Immediately after the failure, two technicians noticed their colleague talking but faint, with no apparent signs of injury. They immediately began assisting him down the tower. At approximately the 200-foot level, one climber realized the technician had stopped breathing, and his partner called 911.
The pair then began CPR and continued their efforts in 30-degree temperatures for approximately an hour, performing resuscitation on the structure until first responders arrived and assisted in lowering the man to the ground. He was pronounced dead shortly thereafter. Their actions were a profound act of dedication under adverse conditions. ... OSHA is investigating and is on site today. ... Media outlets have incorrectly reported that the tower was 425 feet tall and that the deceaseds coworkers required rescue. Neither statement is accurate.
{snip}