19 Miss. Code. R. 8-1.5 - Minimum Standards Adoption of Nationally Recognized Safety Codes
(1) If not previously adopted, the
Administrator shall automatically adopt the latest editions of the following
standards six months from their effective date:
(a) THE NATIONAL SAFETY CODE FOR ELEVATORS
AND ESCALATORS (ASME A.17.1)
(b)
THE NATIONAL SAFETY CODE FOR EXISTING ELEVATORS AND ESCALATORS (ASME A.17.3
[2011])
(i) ASME A.17.3 [2011] shall only
apply to a conveyance when an alteration is being performed pursuant to Section
8.7 of ASME A.17.1. If an alteration is not being performed, ASME A.17.1 shall
apply and a conveyance shall be required to comply with the ASME A.17.1 edition
that was in effect at the time the conveyance was installed.
(c) THE NATIONAL SAFETY STANDARD
FOR PLATFORM LIFTS AND STAIRWAY CHAIRLIFTS (ASME A.18.1)
(d) THE NATIONAL SAFETY STANDARD FOR THE
QUALIFICATIONS OF ELEVATOR INSPECTORS (ASME QEI-1)
(e) AUTOMATED PEOPLE MOVER STANDARDS (ASCE
21)
(f) Equipment otherwise covered
under these sections which is located at an industrial facility that is not
accessible by the general public and which is used in the construction,
operation, or maintenance of the facility is exempted from the requirements of
this Act.
(2) Hydraulic
elevators that have any portion of the cylinder buried in the ground and that
do not have a double cylinder or a cylinder with a safety bulkhead shall:
(a) have the cylinder replaced with a double
cylinder or a cylinder with a safety bulkhead protected from corrosion by one
or more of the following methods:
(i)
monitored cathodic protection;
(ii)
a coating to protect the cylinder from corrosion that will withstand the
installation process;
(iii) by a
protective plastic casing immune to galvanic or electrolic action, salt water,
and other known underground conditions; or
(b) be provided with a device meeting the
requirements of Section 3.5 or a device arranged to operate in the down
direction at an over speed not exceeding 125% of rated speed. The device shall
mechanically act to limit the maximum car speed to the buffer striking speed,
or stop the elevator car with rated load with a deceleration not to exceed
32.2ft/s2(9.8m/s2), and shall not automatically reset. Actuation of the device
shall cause power to be removed from the pump motor and control valves until
manually reset; or
(c) have other
means acceptable to the authority having jurisdiction to protect against
unintended movement of the car as a result of uncontrolled fluid loss;
or
(d) have hydraulic jacks
pressure tested annually. Any elevator with a hydraulic jack determined to be
leaking underground shall be immediately shut off until the jack unit is
replaced.
(3) The
following standards shall govern restricted openings of hoistway doors and/or
car doors on passenger elevators.
(a) When a
car is outside the unlocking zone, the hoistway doors or car doors shall be so
arranged that the hoistway doors or car doors cannot be opened more than 4 in.
(102 mm) from inside the car.
(b)
When the car is outside the unlocking zone, the car doors shall be operable
from outside the car without the use of special tools.
(c) The unlocking zone shall extend from the
landing floor level to a point no greater than 18 in. (457 mm) above or below
the landing floor level.
(d) All
existing elevators that are not in compliance with this rule have six months
after the inspection report is received by the department to be in
compliance.
(4) The
following procedures shall be followed for Temporary Certificates of Operation.
(a) A temporary certificate of operation may
be issued at the discretion of the chief inspector if requested by the elevator
contractor and the inspector. This request must be submitted by the inspector
in the form of an inspection report, along with the required fee.
(b) The elevator must have all safety devices
properly tested and tagged by a licensed elevator contractor and checked and
witnessed by a licensed inspector.
(c) When the inspection report and fee are
submitted to this office, the inspector is certifying the elevator is safe for
this type service.
(5) In
order to reduce the hazards associated with water on energized circuits from
the activation of sprinklers in the elevator equipment room, new elevator
installations, and modernizations/alterations will require the shunt trip to
each elevator disconnecting means to be located outside the elevator equipment
room.
(a) It shall de-energize both the line
side and load side of the affected elevator's disconnecting means.
(b) In cases of extreme difficulty in
locating the shunt trip outside the machine room, and with prior written
approval from the administrator, locating the shunt trip in the machine room
may be approved, if the disconnect is a rainproof NEMA 3R or better
enclosure.
(c) Control circuits to
shut down elevator power shall be monitored for presence of operating voltage.
Loss of voltage to the control circuit for the disconnecting means shall cause
a supervisory signal to be indicated at the control unit and required remote
enunciators.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.