generators are huge dangers, not only for linemen, but tree workers, and any one that is in a related field when outtages happen.
i worked for a world wide tree service, and worked many hurricanes, including the katrina/rita season. was in north miami/hollywood when katrina blew through... we restored about a million customers in florida before heading west to Louisiana and east Texas coast.
we dealt with generators all day everyday, and the people trying to use them, and its a wide spread, and rampant problem of people backfeeding circuits, especially down in the hurricane areas, people know they will be without power for extended periods, buy generators, but have no clue how to use them. hurricane relief workers are injured every season by these backfeeding generators. in many instances, we thought all safety precautions were in place, but there were still live circuits we didnt know about. scary stuff.
we used our insulated pruner poles to "temporarily disconnect"(clip) many a service drop when we suspected a generator was being used on the circuit, and let the linemen deal with it later. its too easy to tag a circuit dead, fuse pulled, and in the middle of working the circuit someone gases up a generator and fires it up, and burns someone up. we also snipped all phone and cable lines, anything that was possibly intermingled with the circuit.. cost people and power/utility companies a lot of money to fix all that stuff, but its just not safe to work.
anyone using a generator during an outtage, unless you are a trained electrician, call the power company, or an electrician, and they will walk you through the proper procedures in hooking up correctly.do all that long before the outtage occurs, and write down a checklist. outtages are a dangerous situation for workers trying to restore your service, dont make the situation harder on them.