Wash. Admin. Code § 296-855-20050 - Exposure evaluations
IMPORTANT:
This section applies when there is a potential for
airborne
When you conduct an
Following this section will also meet the requirements to identify and evaluate respiratory hazards found in chapter 296-841 WAC, Airborne contaminants.
Step one: | Identify all employees who have
potential |
Step two: | Identify operations where employee
exposures could exceed EtO's fifteen-minute |
Step three: | Select employees from those working in the operations you identified in Step two who will have their STEL exposures measured. |
Step four: | Select employees from those
identified in Step one who will have their eight-hour exposures
monitored.
* Make sure the exposures of the employees selected represent eight-hour exposures for all employees identified in Step one including each job classification, work area, and shift. * If you expect all employee exposures to be
below the |
Note: | You can use Steps three through six
of this process to create a written description of the procedure used
for obtaining representative employee |
Exemption: | 1. You can skip Steps four through
seven if you have documentation conclusively demonstrating that
employee |
2. Such documentation can be based on observations, data, calculations, and previous air monitoring results. Previous air monitoring results: | |
a. Must meet the accuracy required by Step five. | |
b. May be from outside sources, such as industry or labor studies. | |
c. Must be based on data that represents conditions being evaluated in your workplace. |
Step five: | Determine how you will obtain
accurate employee |
* ±twenty-five percent when concentrations are potentially above the AL or eight-hour time-weighted average of one part per million (ppm). | |
* ±thirty-five percent when concentrations are potentially above the AL of 0.5 ppm or the STEL of five ppm. |
Note: | Here are examples of air monitoring methods that meet this accuracy requirement: |
1. OSHA Method thirty found by going to: http://www.osha.gov/dts/sltc/methods/toc.html. | |
2. NIOSH Method thirty eight hundred found by going to:http://www.cdc.gov./niosh/homepage.html [File Link Not Available] and linking to the NIOSH Manual of analytical methods. |
Step six: | Obtain employee monitoring results by collecting air samples representing employees identified in Steps three and four. |
* Collect STEL samples for employees and operations selected in Step three. | |
* Collect samples representing the
eight-hour |
|
* Make sure samples are collected
from each selected employee's |
Note: | 1. You may use any sampling method that meets the accuracy specified in Step five. Examples of these methods include: |
a. Real-time monitors that provide
immediate |
|
b. Equipment that collects samples that are sent to a laboratory for analysis. | |
2. The following are examples of methods for collecting samples representative of eight-hour exposures. | |
a. Collect one or more continuous samples, such as a single eight-hour sample or four two-hour samples. | |
b. Take a minimum of five brief samples, such as five fifteen-minute samples, during a work shift at randomly selected times. | |
3. For work shifts longer than
eight hours, monitor the continuous eight-hour portion of the shift
expected to have the highest average |
Step seven: | Have the samples you collected analyzed to obtain monitoring results for eight-hour and STEL exposures. |
* Determine if employee |
|
- Eight-hour time-weighted average (TWA8) of one ppm. | |
- Fifteen-minute |
|
- Eight-hour |
Note: | You may contact your local WISHA consultant for help: |
1. Interpreting data or other information. | |
2. Determining eight-hour or
fifteen-minute employee |
Notes
Statutory Authority: RCW 49.17.010, 49.17.040, 49.17.050, 49.17.060. 07-06-005, § 296-855-20050, filed 2/22/07, effective 4/1/07; 05-17-168, § 296-855-20050, filed 8/23/05, effective 1/1/06.
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