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Note:
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For wildland firefighting personal protective
equipment and clothing requirements see WAC
296-305-07012,
Personal protective clothing and equipment for wildland firefighting.
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(1) Employers
must provide and maintain at no cost to the employee the appropriate protective
ensemble/protective clothing to protect from the hazards to which the member is
or is likely to be exposed. Information on hazard assessments can be found in
WAC
296-800-16005.
Employers must ensure the use of all protective equipment and clothing required
by this standard. Full protective equipment designated for the task, must be
worn for all department activities.
(2) Firefighters must be trained in the
function, donning and doffing, care, use, inspection, maintenance and
limitations of the protective equipment assigned to them or available for their
use.
(3) Protective clothing and
protective equipment must be used and maintained in accordance with
manufacturer's instructions. A written maintenance, repair, retirement,
servicing, and inspection program must be established for protective clothing
and equipment. Specific responsibilities must be assigned for inspection and
maintenance. This requirement applies to firefighter's personally owned
equipment as well as equipment issued by the employer.
(4) The fire department must provide for the
cleaning of protective clothing and contaminated station/work uniforms at no
cost to the employee. Such cleaning must be performed by either a cleaning
service, or at a fire department facility, that is equipped to handle
contaminated clothing. If the fire department does its own cleaning, they must
follow the manufacturer's recommended cleaning procedure or the 2008 edition of
NFPA 1851, Standard on Selection, Care and Maintenance of Protective Ensembles
for Structural Fire Fighting and Proximity Fire Fighting.
(5) Personal protective equipment and
clothing must be of a type specified by NIOSH, MSHA, NFPA, ANSI, or as
specifically referenced in the appropriate section of this chapter.
(6) Station/work uniforms. Station/work
uniforms are not themselves intended as primary protective garments.
(a) Station/work uniforms if provided, must
meet the requirements as specified in the 1990 or 1994 edition of NFPA 1975,
Standard on Station/Work Uniforms for Fire and Emergency Services. However,
departments are not required to provide station/work uniforms for their
employees.
(b) Station/work
uniforms include trousers, and/or coveralls, but exclude shirts, underwear, and
socks.
(c) Members must not wear
any clothing that is determined to be unsafe due to poor thermal stability or
poor flame resistance when engaged in or exposed to the hazards of structural
firefighting. The fire department must inform members of the hazards of fabrics
that melt, drip, burn, stick to the skin and cause burns to the wearer due to
poor thermal stability or poor flame resistance, and must prohibit their use by
employees. Garments that are not provided by the employer, and that are made
from all or mostly cotton, will meet the requirements of this
section.
(d) Garments meeting the
requirements of WAC
296-305-07012(1),
meet the intent of this section.
(7) Proximity firefighting clothing:
(a) All turnout clothing used as proximity
clothing must meet the requirements of the 2000 edition of NFPA, 1976 Standard
on Protective Ensemble for Proximity Firefighting.
(b) There must be at least a two-inch overlap
of all layers of the protective coat and the protective trousers so there is no
gaping of the total thermal protection when the protective garments are worn.
The minimum overlap must be determined by measuring the garments on the wearer,
without SCBA, with the wearer in the most stretched position, hands together
reaching overhead as high as possible.
(c) Single piece protective coveralls must
not be required to have an overlap of all layers as long as there is continuous
full thermal protection.
(d) Fire
departments that provide protective coats with protective resilient wristlets
secured through a thumb opening may provide gloves of the gauntlet type for use
with these protective coats. Fire departments that do not provide such
wristlets attached to all protective coats must provide gloves of the wristlet
type for use with these protective coats.