Or. Admin. Code § 437-004-1250 - Confined and Hazardous Spaces
(1) Definitions.
(a) Competent person is somebody who can
identify existing and predictable hazards and take measures to eliminate
them.
(b) Confined space is a space
that:
(A) Is large enough and so configured
that an employee can bodily enter and work; and
(B) Has limited or restricted entry or exit
(for example, tanks, vessels, silos, storage bins, hoppers, vaults, and pits
may have limited entry); and
(C) Is
not designed for continuous employee occupancy.
(c) Engulfment is the covering of a person by
a liquid or finely divided (flowable) solid substance that when inhaled causes
death or that can exert enough force on the body to cause death by
strangulation, constriction or crushing.
(d) Entry is passing through an opening into
a hazardous or confined space. Entry includes work in the space and occurs when
any part of the entrant's body breaks the plane of an opening into the space in
a way that creates a hazard.
(e)
IDLH Atmospheres. Atmospheres immediately dangerous to life or health (IDLH)
are those with less than 19.5 percent oxygen by volume, or which because of the
high toxicity of the contaminant, would endanger the life of a person breathing
them for even a short period of time.
(f) Oxygen deficient is an atmosphere with
less than 19.5 percent oxygen by volume.
(2) Fuel bins.
(a) Fuel bins must have adequate exits and
all necessary devices to provide safety for employees who enter them.
(b) There may be sentry stations or tunnels
near the bottom conveyor for employees to use to stoke down congested fuel
through openings. Safely built pneumatic bottoms, mechanical agitators or
scrapers and similar devices are acceptable.
(3) Entering confined spaces.
(a) Test first. Always test the atmosphere in
a confined space before an employee places any part of their body into it.
Following the instructions below, test first for oxygen, then flammable
atmosphere then toxic atmosphere.
(b) Entry. No person will enter or work in
any confined space with an atmosphere immediately dangerous to life or health,
except under the following conditions:
(A)
They must wear a supplied air or self-contained air breathing
apparatus;
(B) They must wear a
safety belt with lifeline attached, where practical. Another person, equipped
as required in subsection (3)(b)(A) above and with safety belt and lifeline
attached, must be at the opening with adequate help available to remove the
person if necessary (see (5), Rescue below);
(C) Failure of the person within the
enclosure to respond to agreed upon signals requires immediate rescue action by
a person or persons equipped as required in subsections (3)(b)(A) and (B)
above;
(D) Air supplied to hose
masks and positive pressure air helmets must be free from harmful dusts, fumes,
mists, vapors, or gases to the extent that breathing it does not constitute
harmful exposure. Position the air intake to the blower fan or compressor to
prevent contamination of the air by carbon monoxide or other hazardous
materials or gases;
(E) Supplied
air respiratory equipment must have an automatic pressure relief valve, and
connect through a pressure reduction valve in the supply line. Maximum
allowable pressure, unless otherwise specifically approved, is 25 pounds per
square inch;
(F) To assure safety
when using positive-pressure air respiratory equipment, a minimum volume of air
delivered to the user must be at least 4 cubic feet of air per minute for a
face mask and 6 cubic feet of air per minute for hoods or helmets.
(c) Oxygen deficient atmospheres.
The atmosphere in a sealed or unventilated confined space is considered
immediately dangerous to life or health. Nobody will enter such space unless:
(A) All requirements for safety equipment and
procedures in (3)(b) above are met; or
(B) A competent person tests the atmosphere
with an oxygen indicator or other suitable device immediately before entry to
ensure that it contains enough oxygen to sustain life; or
(C) Until mechanical ventilation provides at
least one complete change of uncontaminated air immediately before entry and
continues while anybody is inside the enclosure. A safety watcher meeting the
requirements in (3)(b) above must be at the entry.
(d) Toxic atmospheres. Nobody will enter any
sealed or unventilated tank or other confined space that contains or has
contained toxic materials or gases, unless:
(A) All requirements for safety equipment and
safety procedures in (3)(b) above are met, or a competent person tests the
atmosphere with an appropriate instrument or method and finds it to have
contaminants below the threshold limit values of the particular material or
gas.
(B) If the atmosphere has
concentrations of hazardous contaminants not immediately dangerous to life or
health, but above the threshold limit values for the toxic material, the person
entering the space must wear respiratory protective equipment approved by the
National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health, or recommended by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture for the exposure.
(e) Flammable or explosive atmospheres. The
atmosphere in any sealed or unventilated tank or other confined space and that
contains or has contained combustible or flammable materials or gases is an
atmosphere immediately dangerous to life or health.
(A) Nobody must enter such space unless all
requirements for safety equipment and safety procedures in (3)(b) above are met
or atmosphere tests by a competent person using an appropriate instrument or
method shows no flammable or explosive atmosphere is present.
(B) If the atmosphere contains flammable or
explosive vapors at or above 20 percent of their lower explosive limit,
ventilate the space enough to bring the level below 20 percent of the lower
explosive limit. Otherwise only persons meeting the requirements of (c) above
may enter the enclosure for emergency work, including preparatory work or work
to set up equipment to eliminate the gas.
(f) Ventilation. Natural and/or mechanical
ventilation must maintain the atmosphere within the limits permissible for
explosive or toxic materials and gases while employees are in the
space.
(g) Residues and other
sources. When there could be a release of explosive or toxic materials from
residues or other sources in a confined space, there must be additional testing
as necessary to assure the atmosphere has not become immediately dangerous to
life or health. If such conditions arise, immediately leave the contaminated
space until the atmosphere is safe for persons wearing respiratory protective
equipment.
(h) Physical hazards. Do
not allow employees to enter confined spaces that contains physical hazards,
until you comply with OAR
437-004-1275.
(i) Engulfment. Do not allow employees to
enter confined spaces where there is a hazard from engulfment by collapsing
material.
(j) Lifeline and
attendant. When entering confined spaces that have loose material (such as
chips, sand, grain, gravel, sawdust, etc.) you must wear a safety belt with
lifeline. There must be an attendant for the lifeline.
(k) Lockout/tagout. Follow the procedures of
OAR 437-004-1275, for intake
pipelines that convey hazardous substances into confined spaces before workers
enter. Blinds, if used, must clearly show whether the line is open or closed.
Close, lock and attach warning tags to valves in such lines nearest the
containers. Blinding or lockout of cold water and air lines is not necessary if
they have positive control valves near the container and you lock, close and
tag the valves.
(4)
Training.
(a) Train all workers before they
do anything covered by this section. Retrain workers when there are changes in
their duties or the spaces related to this section.
(b) Training must cover all hazards
associated with the employer's confined and hazardous spaces.
(c) Training must cover this standard and all
duties associated with it.
(d) Keep
written documentation of all training until it is superseded by new
training.
(5) Rescue.
(a) These requirements apply to employers who
have employees enter confined spaces to rescue people.
(A) You must give each rescuer the personal
protective equipment and rescue equipment necessary to make rescues from
hazardous spaces. You must also provide training on the proper use of that
equipment.
(B) Train each rescuer
in basic first aid and in cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). At least one
rescuer with current certification in first aid and in CPR must be
available.
(b) When
employers arrange to have persons other than their own employees do confined
space rescue, the employer must:
(A) Inform
the rescue service of the hazards they may confront during the rescue at the
host employer's facility; and
(B)
Provide the rescue service with access to all confined spaces from which rescue
may be necessary so that the rescue service can develop appropriate rescue
plans and practice rescue operations.
(c) To accomplish non-entry rescue, attach
the other end of the retrieval line to a mechanical device or fixed point
outside the hazardous space in a way that rescue can begin as soon as the
rescuer becomes aware that rescue is necessary.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 654.025(2) & ORS 656.726(3)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 654.001 - ORS 654.295
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