This guide highlights essential precautions including wearing protective gear, disconnecting power sources, handling fiber scraps carefully, avoiding face or eye contact, following regulatory standards, using adequate lighting, and keeping food or beverages away from work areas. Fiber optic technicians and telecom workers are in charge of installing, maintaining, and fixing fiber optic network systems. This can involve working with lasers, precision equipment, micro-scale glass fragments, heights, tools, and working near or with utility or electrical infrastructure. It is. Introduction This Program provides supervision, employees and safety managers with general safety rules, task safety procedures and best techniques for installation of quality fiber optic cable systems (cable handling, splicing, pulling, terminating testing and trouble shooting tasks). It is the. es conform to the guidelines expressed in the American National Standards Institute document (ANSI Z535) for hazard alert messages. Know the standards that apply to your work Whether you're installing new fiber optic cables or troubleshooting and repairing an existing fiber network, a working knowledge of the regulations that apply to your. Working with fiber optic cabling requires precision, skill, and a strong understanding of cabling safety.