This post examines the chain of mistakes that typically turn an ordinary under‑house repair into a fatal event—and the systems, habits, and safeguards that prevent that tragedy from ever happening on your crew.
The headline we never want to read
Years ago, a safety poster burned itself into my memory: a kid on a beach, wrapped in a towel, with the words, “How do you tell a 5‑year‑old that Daddy will never come home again?” That message is why safety isn’t a box to check at the end of the morning huddle—it’s the culture you establish before the truck leaves the shop.
When a plumber dies under a house, it almost never comes down to one mistake. It’s layers of small compromises: working wet “just this once,” tunneling farther without a second exit, skipping a gas check because “we’re almost done,” or trusting soft, saturated soil to hold because it looked okay yesterday. In a recent incident that shook our trade, a crew had been tunneling roughly 60 feet under a house when mud and water sloughed off, engulfed a worker, and left only his head exposed. Five coworkers were on site, and it still took emergency responders more than an hour to recover the body. That’s the reality of an engulfment: it happens fast, and rescue is slow.
We can do better. Here’s how.
What actually goes wrong in under‑slab tunneling
Water + soil = collapse
Water changes everything. It makes soil heavier, lubricates particles so they slide, dissolves cohesion in clays, and undermines the tunnel “arch” you’re counting on. A wet wall that “held yesterday” can shear with zero warning today. If the work area is muddy, if the homeowner is still using plumbing fixtures, or if groundwater is seeping in, you’re not just uncomfortable—you’re in a collapse zone.
Single‑entry mindset
Tunneling 60 feet with only one way out is a recipe for disaster. If anything goes wrong—slump, gas, equipment failure—you’ve got a long crawl against time. A second egress isn’t a convenience; it’s a lifeline. Treat tunnels like trenches and confined spaces: if you extend beyond a reasonable distance, you plan a second entrance.
“It looks fine” engineering
Under a slab, the structure above can be perfectly stable even while the soil around you is ready to cave. The house not being “at risk of collapsing” says nothing about your safety. A slab and beams can span farther than you think; that’s good for the homeowner, but it can lull crews into trusting poor soil conditions below. Bring an engineer into the plan when needed, and size your tunnel to protect people first, not just to “get the job done.”
Atmosphere and power hazards
Beneath a house, you can face oxygen deficiency, methane and hydrogen sulfide from sewers, carbon monoxide from pumps or generators, and shock hazards from wet cords. If you aren’t testing the air, ventilating the space, and running GFCI‑protected power, you’re betting lives on luck.
Digging the right way: standards that save lives
Give people room to live, not just work
A tunnel that’s barely wider than your shoulders is a trap. We dig our tunnels about three feet wide because a person must be able to move, turn, and retreat. That width also allows you to set shoring or bracing properly and move materials without scraping the walls. Tight tunnels are faster to dig and slower to escape—never a good trade.
Keep spoil back and above grade
Spoil piles belong at least two feet from the tunnel entrance and any open trench edges. Letting spoil crowd the lip adds weight and pushes the face to shear. Keep the path clear so workers can exit without crawling over loose dirt.
Control water before you start
Water is the enemy of safe tunneling.
- Shut off the house water when the leak is on the water line.
- Tell the homeowner not to use any drains when the work involves sewer lines. Even a single toilet flush adds gallons to your work area, and with it, bacteria and gas.
- Dewater proactively. Sump pumps, drain channels to daylight, or vac trucks—choose the method that keeps your path dry.
- Divert downspouts and surface water away from the tunnel route if rain is in the forecast.
If the tunnel walls are wet, you don’t enter. If they become wet while you’re in, you exit and re‑stabilize.
Build in egress
In trenches, a ladder must be within 25 feet of workers once depth hits four feet. Treat tunnels with the same discipline. If you’re 40, 50, 60 feet in, plan another entrance from the opposite side or a perpendicular access point. Egress isn’t just about convenience—it’s about survivability when seconds count.
Shore, shield, or step away
Open trenches five feet or deeper require protection unless you’re in stable rock. Under a slab, you often need protective systems sooner due to geometry and soil condition. Practical options include:
- Timber or hydraulic shoring: Strong‑backs, wales, and cross‑braces sized for your soil.
- Plywood or trench panels to hold faces where you expect sloughing.
- Sequential cribbing as you advance: dig 2–3 feet, brace; dig, brace; never outpace your protection.
- Avoid casual “benching.” In a tunnel, you don’t have room to cut proper benches; sloppy benches load the face and can blow out.
If you can’t protect it, you don’t work in it.
Inspect, then inspect again
Conditions change by the hour. The competent person inspects before entry, continuously while people are below, and after any event that can alter stability (rain, a flush upstairs, a pump shutting off, a load placed near the entrance). “We checked it this morning” doesn’t count when you’re still down there after lunch.
Bring in engineering when you need it
Good engineers understand load paths and span capacity. On larger tunnels—long runs, unusual soils, or bearing beams close by—get an engineer’s eyes on the plan. I’ve had engineers tell me that a slab could span several feet without distress, which was reassuring for the structure, but we still kept our tunnel narrow and our bracing tight because the priority wasn’t the concrete—it was the people below it.
Confined‑space realities under a house
Test the air before and during entry
A four‑gas monitor (O₂, LEL, CO, H₂S) is non‑negotiable. Oxygen below 19.5% is dangerous. Hydrogen sulfide can deaden your sense of smell and knock you unconscious within breaths. Methane can displace oxygen and explode. Test at the entrance, then test where you’re working, then keep testing as you advance.
Ventilate with purpose
A box fan in the living room isn’t “ventilation.” Use ducted blowers to move fresh air to the face and exhaust bad air out. In long tunnels, run the duct close to where the person is working, and keep the fan running as long as anyone is inside. If ventilation stops, you get out—immediately.
Keep engines and exhaust away
Never put a generator or gas‑powered pump near a tunnel mouth. Carbon monoxide hugs low spaces and finds its way in. Use electric submersible pumps on GFCI with cords routed to stay dry and undamaged. Keep power connections out of puddles and off mud.
Light the work, not the risk
Use low‑voltage or well‑protected lights rated for damp locations. Heat and ignition sources don’t belong in atmospheres that might have flammable gas.
Culture beats compliance
Safety gear is the last line of defense. Culture is the first.
- Job Hazard Analysis (JHA) happens before the dig, not after the first scoop. Talk through soil, water, egress, utilities, atmosphere, weather, and rescue.
- Stop‑work authority belongs to every person on the crew, from apprentice to foreman. If your gut says “this isn’t right,” you back out and fix it—no questions asked, no retaliation.
- Daily huddles start with the plan and end with, “What could go wrong?” If the answer changes as the day goes on, the plan changes with it.
- One worker, one watcher. Nobody works alone underground. Someone at the entrance maintains constant contact and has the authority to call it off.
Homeowner coordination that actually helps
Most under‑slab work happens in homes. Set expectations early:
- No water use unless cleared: no showers, laundry, dishes, or “just a quick flush.”
- Pets and kids stay away from the work area; you keep barriers up and the site secure.
- Noise and ventilation are part of the process; fans may run, and doors may be open to move air safely.
- Weather plan: If rain’s coming, you may pause or change tactics. The homeowner needs to hear this up front.
When a homeowner knows the “why,” they’re more willing to cooperate. Every gallon kept out of your tunnel makes the work safer and faster.
Weather: the silent saboteur
A forecast that looks innocent can saturate a yard, fill a trench, and turn firm clay to soup. Build weather windows into your schedule. If the sky opens up, you don’t “just finish this connection.” You exit, stabilize the face, secure the site, and return when conditions are safe. If you must keep water out, plan real diversion: berms, plastic sheeting, sandbags—not hope.
Emergency readiness (because seconds matter)
Nobody ever plans to dial 911. Plan anyway.
- Address posted and visible. Make it effortless for responders to find you.
- Clear access for trucks and remove obstacles at the curb.
- Site map of tunnel paths taped inside the front door or posted near the entrance.
- Rescue gear staged but not used recklessly: shoring materials, boards, and wedges can make a scene safer for first responders.
- Hands off the victim after a collapse. Most secondary deaths in trench and tunnel collapses happen when untrained rescuers jump in. Secure the area, call immediately, and keep people out until the experts arrive.
An engulfment can compress the chest so breathing is impossible even with the head exposed, which is why “digging fast” without shoring often makes things worse. Your job after a collapse is to prevent more victims and speed professional rescue.
A practical under‑slab tunneling checklist
Use this before anyone climbs under a house:
- Scope confirmed: exact line, length, and connection points marked; utilities located.
- Soil and structure reviewed: anticipated type, water table considerations, nearby beams.
- Water control plan active: house water off (if needed), homeowner briefed on no‑use rules, pump staged and tested, diversion in place.
- Sizing set: tunnel planned at ~3 feet wide with adequate height for safe movement.
- Protection ready: timber/hydraulic shoring, panels, cribbing staged; sequential bracing plan defined.
- Egress planned: ladders placed; second entrance scheduled if distance requires.
- Atmosphere controls: four‑gas monitor calibrated; ventilation with ducting set; power on GFCI; no engines near entrance.
- Crew roles: competent person named; dedicated attendant assigned; communication signals established.
- Weather checked: go/no‑go criteria agreed upon.
- Emergency plan: address posted, site map ready, shoring materials accessible, first‑aid kit stocked, phones charged.
If any box can’t be checked, you don’t “make do.” You fix the gap or you reschedule.
Lessons from a 60‑foot tunnel
When a crew tunnels that far with one entrance, wet walls, and active water, the outcome is almost always dictated by physics, not determination. Soil wants to move. Water accelerates that movement. Human lungs need space and time. If you want a different ending, you design a different job:
- Shorter runs with staggered access.
- Dry soil before you enter, keep it dry while you’re in, and re‑stabilize if it changes.
- Shoring that matches the soil you’re actually in—not the soil you wish you had.
- Air you’ve tested and a way out you can reach in seconds.
The responsibility of owners and leaders
Company owners and foremen set the standard. If the message is “just get it done,” you’ll get it done—until the day you don’t. If the message is “do it right or we don’t do it,” crews slow down, ask better questions, and come home. Invest in training. Buy the monitors, shoring, and pumps before you bid the work. Celebrate the apprentice who says, “This looks wrong,” and backs out. That moment is leadership, not defiance.
The message to every plumber
You are not replaceable to the people who love you. No job is worth a shortcut that gambles with your life. If a tunnel is wet, if you don’t have a second way out, if the air hasn’t been checked, if there’s no plan for shoring—say no. You don’t need permission to protect yourself. Make a habit of doing the right thing so strong that when things go sideways, the good choices feel automatic.
Conclusion
“Plumber Dies on the Job! What Went WRONG?” is a question we answer long before anyone picks up a shovel. What goes wrong is usually simple: water in the work, no egress, poor atmospheric control, and a culture that normalizes risk. What goes right is equally simple but requires discipline: dry the area, size the tunnel for humans, shore as you go, provide a second exit, test and ventilate the air, and empower every person to stop work if the second conditions change.
We owe our teams more than condolences after a tragedy. We owe them a plan that keeps them alive in the first place. Whatever you’re doing today, do it safely—and hit it hard.