Monday, March 27, 2006

OSHA Letter of Interpretation Regarding Wearing Hardhats Backwards


April 17, 2002
Ms. Linda Keene
Safety Coordinator
Pipe Systems Inc.
P.O. Box 420
Carthage, MO 64836

Re: §1926.100(a) and (b); hard hat protection

Dear Ms. Keene:
This is in response to your letter of November 26, 2001, and a follow-up telephone conversation with Steve Stock of my staff, requesting guidance on OSHA hard hat requirements. Your letter was delayed in reaching this office because mail addressed to the government is first sent to a facility that sanitizes it. We apologize for the delay in addressing your concerns. We have paraphrased your question as follows: Question: According to a letter issued by OSHA on July 22, 1992, under §1926.100(a) and (b), hard hats used by employees must be worn with the bill facing forward unless the hard hat manufacturer certifies that the bill facing back meets ANSI Z89.1-1969. Does OSHA still adhere to this interpretation? Answer:Section 1926.100(a) provides:
Employees working in areas where there is a possible danger of head injury from impact, or from flying objects, or from electrical shock and [electrical] burns, shall be protected by protective helmets. Section 1926.100(b) provides:
Helmets for the protection of employees against impact and penetration of falling and flying objects shall meet the specifications contained in American National Standards Institute, Z89.1-1969, Safety Requirements for Industrial Head Protection.1 In the July 22, 1992, letter to Mr. Artie Scruggs, OSHA stated:
ANSI only tests and certifies hard hats to be worn with the bill forward [;] hard hats worn with the bill to the rear would not be considered reliable protection and would not meet the requirements of 29 CFR 1926.100(a) and (b) unless the hard hat manufacturer certifies that this practice meets the ANSI Z89.1-1969 requirements. This continues to be OSHA's interpretation of this standard. Additionally, note that a manufacturer may certify that it would be acceptable to wear the hard hat with the bill to the rear when the hard hat liner is turned/reversed. If you need additional information, please do not hesitate to contact us by fax at: U.S. Department of Labor, OSHA, [Directorate of Construction, Office of Construction Standards and Guidance], fax # 202-693-1689. You can also contact us by mail at the above office, Room N3468, 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20210, although there will be a delay in our receiving correspondence by mail.

Sincerely,
Russell B. Swanson,
DirectorDirectorate of Construction

1The impact testing requirements of ANSI Z89.1-1986 are even more specific than the 1969 version of the standard. Since the revised standard is, in effect, more rigorous, a hard hat that meets the criteria of the revised standard also meets the §1926.100 requirement for falling and flying object protection.

Friday, March 24, 2006

Upcoming Safety Training ~ April-June 2006

OSHA 10 Hour-Construction
Dates:,April 6-7, May 9-10, June 8-9
Time: 8am to 2pm
Cost: $75.00 members/$185.00 non-members
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OSHA 10 Hour-General Industry
Dates: May 18-19
Time: 8am to 2pm
Cost: $75.00 members/$185.00 non-members
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CPR and First Aid Training
Date: April 10, May 8, or June 12
Time: 8am to 12pm
Cost: $55.00 members/$70.00 non-members
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Flagger Certification-ATSSA Course
Date: May 17
Time: 8am to 1pm
Cost: $60.00 members/$75.00 non members
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Spanish for Safety with Ameriga Strache
Part Two
Dates: May 15,22, June 5,12,19,26, July 10,17
Time: 5pm until 7pm
Cost: $325.00 members, $475.00 non members

For more information on
ABC Baltimore Safety Services
or Safety Course Offerings,
Please Contact Mike Barton at 410-821-0351, mbarton@abcbaltimore.org
or see our Safety Blog at
www.abcbaltimoresafety.blogspot.com

Tuesday, March 14, 2006

Ditch Collapses On Construction Worker


A man laying sewer pipe in a nine-foot ditch suffered a broken leg and bruised pelvis when the walls of the ditch collapsed on him Friday afternoon.Mike Wood was trapped in the ditch, from the waist down, for more than two hours while rescuers worked to dig him out. Paramedics were worried Wood might not make it through the ordeal.“They had checked his vitals, he was breathing, which is unusual in a trench rescue that lasts this long,” said Capt. Mitch Chism of Little Rock Fire Department.To save Wood's life, firefighters checked the air quality regularly in the ditch and hooked him up to an I.V. Then, they cut wood planks to hold up panels to keep back dirt from falling back into the ditch. Digging to free his legs was constant.“The people in the ditch, they dug the right leg out first and the second leg out. Like I said, he was in the dirt waist deep,” Chism says.Then after two exhausting hours, Woods was finally lifted free and rushed to a local hospital. He's expected to fully recover.
Worker Electrocuted In Beaver County

(KDKA) Aliquippa Authorities in Beaver County say a man was electrocuted while working on the roof of an Aliquippa home today. Regis Williams, 24, was found dead after he fell about 25 feet to the ground.According to police, Duquesne Light ordered the crew from Zeke and Sons to remove the scaffolding from the Washington Street location before the accident because it was too close to some power lines and too windy.Police and Duquesne Light officials say he and his co-workers should have never been on the scaffolding. Duquesne Light workers had been in the area fixing another down line nearby when they noticed where the scaffolding is located. It was entirely too dangerous.They told those working there to stop operations.“We advised them to take it down. The fact is, it’s our obligation to point out unsafe conditions. Anyone should at least be 10 feet away from any electrified wires,” said Joe Balaban, a spokesman for Duquesne Light.Police say a piece of aluminum apparently made contact with wires and brought an electrical charge to the scaffolding.Duquesne Light told KDKA the power lines did not move.
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