Photos courtesy of Hackensack Fire Department. Upon touching overhead powerlines with his bucket, a worker went uninjured despite electricity being sent through the truck and to the ground.

Photos courtesy of Hackensack Fire Department.
Upon touching overhead powerlines with his bucket, a worker went uninjured despite electricity being sent through the truck and to the ground.

An aerial bucket truck worker was not hurt when he was touched by overhead power lines that sent electricity to the ground through the truck on the morning of Feb. 6, in Hackensack, N.J., reports NJ.com. The worker, a contractor not employed by PSEG, was testing equipment. 

City firefighters brought the worker to safety and used dry chemical extinguishers to douse a fire in the bucket truck, the fire department said. Emergency medical services checked the worker, who was shaken up, but not injured.

Electrocution is one of the leading hazards with the use of aerial work platforms in the U.S. In 2013, all seven reported cases of electrocution worldwide occurred in the U.S.

Read an in-depth article about bucket truck safety do's and don'ts.

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