Utah Admin. Code R313-15-703 - Use of Individual Respiratory Protection Equipment
If the licensee or registrant uses respiratory protection equipment to limit the intake of radioactive material:
(1) Except as provided in Subsection
R313-15-703(2), the licensee or registrant shall use only respiratory
protection equipment that is tested and certified by the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health.
(2)
The licensee or registrant may use equipment that has not been tested or
certified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health or for
which there is no schedule for testing or certification, provided the licensee
or registrant has submitted to the Director and the Director has approved an
application for authorized use of that equipment. The application must include
a demonstration by testing, or a demonstration on the basis of reliable test
information, that the material and performance characteristics of the equipment
are capable of providing the proposed degree of protection under anticipated
conditions of use.
(3) The licensee
or registrant shall implement and maintain a respiratory protection program
that includes:
(a) Air sampling sufficient to
identify the potential hazard, permit proper equipment selection, and estimate
doses; and
(b) Surveys and
bioassays, as necessary, to evaluate actual intakes; and
(c) Testing of respirators for operability,
user seal check for face sealing devices and functional check for others,
immediately prior to each use; and
(d) Written procedures regarding
(i) Monitoring, including air sampling and
bioassays;
(ii) Supervision and
training of respirator users;
(iii)
Fit testing;
(iv) Respirator
selection;
(v) Breathing air
quality;
(vi) Inventory and
control;
(vii) Storage, issuance,
maintenance, repair, testing, and quality assurance of respiratory protection
equipment;
(viii) Recordkeeping;
and
(ix) Limitations on periods of
respirator use and relief from respirator use; and
(e) Determination by a physician prior to
initial fitting of respirators, before the first field use of non-face sealing
respirators, and either every 12 months thereafter or periodically at a
frequency determined by a physician, that the individual user is medically fit
to use the respiratory protection equipment; and
(f) Fit testing, with fit factor greater than
or equal to ten times the APF for negative pressure devices, and a fit factor
greater than or equal to 500 for positive pressure, continuous flow, and
pressure-demand devices, before the first field use of tight fitting,
face-sealing respirators and periodically thereafter at a frequency not to
exceed one year. Fit testing must be performed with the facepiece operating in
the negative pressure mode.
(4) The licensee or registrant shall advise
each respirator user that the user may leave the area at any time for relief
from respirator use in the event of equipment malfunction, physical or
psychological distress, procedural or communication failure, significant
deterioration of operating conditions, or any other conditions that might
require such relief.
(5) The
licensee or registrant shall also consider limitations appropriate to the type
and mode of use. When selecting respiratory devices the licensee shall provide
for vision correction, adequate communication, low temperature work
environments, and the concurrent use of other safety or radiological protection
equipment. The licensee or registrant shall use equipment in such a way as not
to interfere with the proper operation of the respirator.
(6) Standby rescue persons are required
whenever one-piece atmosphere-supplying suits, or any combination of supplied
air respiratory protection device and personnel protective equipment are used
from which an unaided individual would have difficulty extricating himself or
herself. The standby persons must be equipped with respiratory protection
devices or other apparatus appropriate for the potential hazards. The standby
rescue persons shall observe or otherwise maintain continuous communication
with the workers (visual, voice, signal line, telephone, radio, or other
suitable means), and be immediately available to assist them in case of a
failure of the air supply or for any other reason that requires relief from
distress. A sufficient number of standby rescue persons must be immediately
available to assist all users of this type of equipment and to provide
effective emergency rescue if needed.
(7) Atmosphere-supplying respirators must be
supplied with respirable air of grade D quality or better as defined by the
Compressed Gas Association in publication G-7.1, "Commodity Specification for
Air," 1997 ed. and included in
29 CFR
1910.134(i)(1)(ii)(A) through (E),
(2010). Grade D quality air criteria include:
(a) Oxygen content (v/v) of 19.5 to
23.5%;
(b) Hydrocarbon (condensed)
content of five milligrams per cubic meter of air or less;
(c) Carbon monoxide (CO) content of ten ppm
or less;
(d) Carbon dioxide content
of 1,000 ppm or less; and
(e) Lack
of noticeable odor.
(8)
The licensee shall ensure that no objects, materials or substances, such as
facial hair, or any conditions that interfere with the face and facepiece seal
or valve function, and that are under the control of the respirator wearer, are
present between the skin of the wearer's face and the sealing surface of a
tight-fitting respirator facepiece.
(9) In estimating the dose to individuals
from intake of airborne radioactive materials, the concentration of radioactive
material in the air that is inhaled when respirators are worn is initially
assumed to be the ambient concentration in air without respiratory protection,
divided by the assigned protection factor. If the dose is later found to be
greater than the estimated dose, the corrected value must be used. If the dose
is later found to be less than the estimated dose, the corrected value may be
used.
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.