Wash. Admin. Code § 332-24-005 - Definitions
Items defined herein have reference to chapter 76.04 RCW and all other provisions of law relating to forest protection and have the meanings indicated unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Abatement" means the
elimination of additional fire hazard by burning, physical removal,
or other means.
(2)
"Additional fire hazard" means additional fire hazard as defined in
RCW 76.04.005.
(3) "Adze eye hoe" means a
serviceable forest firefighting hoe with a blade width of at least
five and three-quarters inches and a rectangular eye. The blade shall
be sharpened, solid, and smooth. The handle shall be hung solid with
no more than three-quarters of an inch nor less than one-eighth of an
inch extending beyond the head, smooth, aligned, and at least
thirty-two inches long.
(4) "Approved exhaust system" means
a well-mounted exhaust system free from leaks and equipped with spark
arrester(s) rated and accepted under United States Department of
Agriculture Forest Service current standards.
(a) Turbochargers qualify as an
approved exhaust system when all gases pass through the turbine
wheel. The turbine must be turning at all times, and there must be no
exhaust bypasses. A straight mechanical-driven supercharger does not
qualify as an approved exhaust system in lieu of an approved spark
arrester.
(b) Passenger
vehicles and trucks may be equipped with an adequately baffled
muffler in lieu of a spark arrester.
(c) General purpose spark arresters
for use on equipment, vehicles, and motorcycles operating on forest
land must meet the performance levels set forth in the Society of
Automotive Engineers (SAE) Recommended Practice SAE J350,
"Requirements of Single Position Application General Purpose
Arresters." The spark arrester shall be permanently marked with the
model number and the manufacturer's identification or trademark. When
the inlet and outlet of an arrester are not easily identified, they
must be marked. Arresters on mobile equipment shall not be mounted
more than forty-five degrees from the qualified position.
(d) Portable power saws purchased
after June 30, 1977, and used on forest land, must meet the
performance levels set forth in the Society of Automotive Engineers
(SAE) Recommended Practice SAE J335b, "Multi-Positioned Small Engine
Exhaust Fire Ignition Suppression." Requirements to obtain the SAE
J335b specifications are as follows:
(i) The spark arrester shall be
designed to retain or destroy ninety percent of the carbon particles
having a major diameter greater than 0.023 inches
(0.584mm).
(ii) The
exhaust system shall be designed so that the exposed surface
temperature shall not exceed five hundred fifty degrees Fahrenheit
(288 degrees Centigrade) where it may come in direct contact with
forest fuels.
(iii) The
exhaust system shall be designed so that the exhaust gas temperature
shall not exceed four hundred seventy-five degrees Fahrenheit (246
degrees Centigrade) where the exhaust flow may strike forest
fuels.
(iv) The exhaust
system shall be designed in such a manner that there are no pockets
or corners where flammable material might accumulate. Pockets are
permissible only if it can be substantiated by suitable test that
material can be prevented from accumulating in the pockets.
(v) The exhaust system must be
constructed of durable material and so designed that it will, with
normal use and maintenance, provide a reasonable service life. Parts
designed for easy replacement as a part of routine maintenance shall
have a service life of not less than fifty hours. Cleaning of parts
shall not be required more frequently than once for each eight hours
of operation. The spark arrester shall be so designed that it may be
readily inspected and cleaned.
(vi) Portable power saws will be
deemed to be in compliance with SAE J335b requirements if they are
certified by the United States Department of Agriculture, Forest
Service, and the San Dimas Equipment Development Center.
(e) Portable power saws
which were purchased prior to June 30, 1977, and which do not meet
the Society of Automotive Engineers Standards, must meet the
following requirements:
(i) The
escape outlet of the spark arrester shall be at an angle of at least
forty-five degrees from a line parallel to the bar;
(ii) The configuration of spark
arrester shall be such that it will not collect sawdust no matter in
what position the saw is operated;
(iii) Spark arrester shall be
designed and made of material that will not allow shell or exhaust
temperature to exceed eight hundred fifty degrees
Fahrenheit;
(iv) The
arrester shall have a screen with a maximum opening size of 0.023
inches (0.584mm.);
(v)
The arrester shall be capable of operating, under normal conditions,
a minimum of eight hours before cleaning is needed;
(vi) The screen shall carry a
manufacturer's warranty of a minimum of fifty-hour life when
installed and maintained in accordance with the manufacturer's
recommendation;
(vii) The
arrester shall be of good manufacture and made so that the arrester
housing and screen are close fitting;
(viii) The arrester shall be at
least ninety percent efficient in the destruction, retention or
attrition of carbon particles over 0.023 inches (0.584mm.);
(ix) Efficiency is to be measured
as described in Power Saw Manufacturer's Association Standard, Number
S365;
(x) Construction of
the arrester shall permit easy removal and replacement of the screen
for field inspection and cleaning.
(f) Multipositioned engine powered
tools, other than power saws, used on forest land must meet the
performance levels set forth in the Society of Automotive Engineers
(SAE) Recommended Practice J335b, "Multi-Positioned Small Engine
Exhaust Fire Ignition Suppression."
(g) Locomotive spark arresters for
use on logging, private or common carrier railroads operating on or
through forest land must meet the performance levels set forth in the
Association of American Railroads (AAR) Recommended Practice,
"Standard for Spark Arresters for Non-Turbo Charged Diesel Engines
Used in Railroad Locomotives."
(5) "Axe" means a serviceable,
double-bitted, swamping axe or single-bitted axe of at least a
three-pound head and thirty-two inch handle. The blades shall be
sharpened, solid and smooth. The handle shall be hung solid, smooth
and straight.
(6)
"Certified electrical fence controller" means an electrical fence
controller that meets the standards for fire safety developed by
Underwriters Laboratories (UL) and indicates approval by bearing the
UL label on the controller.
(7) "Currently with the logging"
and "current with the felling of live timber, or with the current
logging operation" means during the logging operation or associated
activities on any landing, setting or similar part of the
operation.
(8) "Debris
disposal fire" means an outdoor fire for the elimination of a fire
hazard and for the purpose of clean-up of natural vegetation and
residue of a natural character such as leaves, clippings, prunings,
trees, stumps, brush, shrubbery, and wood so long as it has not been
treated by an application of prohibited material or substance in a
pile no larger than that allowed in WAC
332-24-211.
(9) "Department" means the
department of natural resources, or its authorized representatives,
as defined in
chapter 43.30 RCW.
(10) "Dump" includes, without
limitation, dumping, depositing, or placing.
(11) "Electrical fence controller"
includes any controller, equipment, appliance, device, or apparatus
used as an electrical fence controller, energizer, or pulsator which
uses or conveys an electrical current.
(12) "Fire extinguisher" means,
unless otherwise stated, a fully charged and operational chemical
fire extinguisher rated by underwriters' laboratory or factory
mutual, appropriately mounted in either a vertical or horizontal
position, and located so as to be readily accessible to the operator.
When two fire extinguishers are required, they are to be
appropriately mounted and located so that one is readily accessible
to the operator and the other is separate from the operator and
readily accessible to other personnel. The fire extinguisher shall be
equipped with a gauge to determine the level of charge present to
propel the chemical from the extinguisher; however fire extinguishers
required for use with portable power saws are not required to be
equipped with a gauge to determine the level of charge.
(13) "Fire hazard" means the
accumulation of combustible materials in such a condition as to be
readily ignited and in such a quantity as to create a hazard from
fire to nearby structures, forest areas, life and property.
(14) "Fire tool box" means a
compartment of sound construction with a waterproof lid, provided
with hinges and hasps and so arranged that the box can be properly
sealed and the contents kept dry. The box shall be red in color and
marked "fire tools" in white or black letters at least three inches
high. The fire tool box shall contain a minimum of:
(a) Two axes or pulaskis;
(b) Three adze eye hoes;
(c) Three shovels.
(15) "Firewatch" means
at least one competent person to be at the site(s) for one hour
following the operation of spark-emitting equipment on class 3L days
or above, or as determined by the department based on the national
fire danger rating system and other fire danger conditions. The
firewatch shall be vigilant and so located or positioned to be able
to detect within five minutes fires which may originate at the
site(s) of the equipment operation. The firewatch shall report a fire
to the responsible protection agency within fifteen minutes of
detection.
(16)
"Fixed-position machine" means any machine used for any portion or
phase of harvesting, thinning, site preparation, land clearing, road,
railroad and utility right of way clearing or maintenance, mineral or
natural resources extraction, or other operation that performs its
primary function from a fixed-position. This definition applies even
though said machine is capable of moving under its own power to a
different fixed position.
(17) "Forest debris" means forest
debris as defined in
RCW 76.04.005.
(18) "Forest land" means forest
land as defined in
RCW 76.04.005.
(19) "Isolation" means the division
or separation of an additional fire hazard into compartments by a
constructed barrier of at least one hundred feet in width at its
narrowest point. The constructed barrier must be free and clear of
forest debris as defined in
RCW 76.04.005 and must
be approved, in writing, by the department.
(20) "Mill waste" means waste of
all kinds from forest products, including, but not limited to,
sawdust, bark, chips, slabs, and cuttings from lumber or
timber.
(21) "Operation"
means the use of equipment, tools, and supporting activities on or
adjacent to forest land that may cause a forest fire to start. Such
activities may include, but are not limited to, any phase of
harvesting, thinning, site preparation, land clearing, road,
railroad, and utility right of way clearing and maintenance, and
mineral or natural resource extraction. The operating period shall be
that time period when the activity is taking place and includes that
time when a firewatch would be required to be in
attendance.
(22) "Outdoor
fire" means the combustion of material in the open, or in a
container, with no provisions for the control of such combustion or
the control of the emissions from the combustion products.
(23) "Person" shall mean any
individual, partnership, private, public, or municipal corporation,
county, the department or other state or local governmental entity,
or association of individuals of whatever nature.
(24) "Prohibited material or
substance" includes rubber products, plastics, asphalt, garbage, dead
animals, petroleum products, paints, or any similar materials that
emit dense smoke or create offensive odors when burned, pursuant to
RCW 70.94.775(1).
(25)
"Pulaski" means a serviceable axe and hoe combination tool with not
less than a three and one-half pound head and thirty-two inch handle.
The blades shall be at least two and one-half inches wide, sharpened,
solid and smooth. The handle shall be hung solid, smooth and
straight.
(26) "Pump
truck or pump trailer" means:
(a) A
serviceable truck or trailer which must be able to perform its
functions efficiently and must be equipped with a water tank of not
less than a three hundred gallon capacity, filled with water. The
complete pump truck or pump trailer shall be kept ready for instant
use for suppressing forest fires. If a trailer is used, it shall be
equipped with a hitch to facilitate prompt moving. A serviceable tow
vehicle shall be immediately available for attachment to the trailer.
The pump truck, or pump trailer with its tow vehicle, must be
available throughout the operating and watchperson periods.
(b) The pump may be a portable pump
or suitable power take-off pump. It shall be plumbed with a bypass or
pressure relief valve. The pump shall develop, at pump level,
pressure sufficient to discharge a minimum of twenty gallons per
minute, using a one-quarter inch nozzle tip through a fifty foot
length of one inch or one and one-half inch rubber-lined
hose.
(c) The pump truck
or pump trailer shall be equipped with the following:
(i) A minimum of five hundred feet
of one or one and one-half inch cotton or synthetic jacket
hose;
(ii) A fully
stocked fire tool box.
(d) The tank shall be plumbed so
that water may be withdrawn by one person by gravity feed. This
outlet shall be adapted to accept the hose used with the pump truck
or pump trailer. The outlet shall be located for easy filling of pump
cans.
(e) The pump truck
or pump trailer must be equipped with fuel, appropriate tools,
accessories and fittings to perform its functions for a continuous
period of four hours. A recommended list of tools, fittings and
accessories may be obtained from the department.
(27) "Recreational fire" means an
outdoor fire for the purpose of sport, pastime or refreshment, such
as camp fires, bonfires, cooking fires, etc., in a hand-built pile no
larger than four feet in diameter and not associated with any debris
disposal activities related to fire hazard elimination or yard and
garden refuse clean-up.
(28) "Reduction" means the
elimination of that amount of additional fire hazard necessary to
produce a remaining average volume of forest debris no greater than
nine tons per acre of material three inches in diameter and
less.
(29) "Shovel" means
a serviceable, long-handled or "D"-handled, round-point shovel of at
least "0" size with a sharpened, solid and smooth blade. The handle
on the shovel shall be hung solid, smooth and straight.
(30) "Snag" means a standing dead
conifer tree over twenty-five feet in height and sixteen inches and
over in diameter, measured at a point four and one-half feet above
the average ground level at the base.
(31) "Tractor or other mobile
machine" means any machine that moves under its own power when
performing any portion or phase of harvesting, thinning, site
preparation, land clearing, road, railroad and utility right of way
clearing or maintenance, mineral or natural resource extraction, or
other operation. This definition includes any machine, whether
crawler or wheel-type, whether such machine be engaged in yarding or
loading, or in some other function during the operation.
(32) "Uncertified electrical fence
controller" includes all electrical fence controllers that do not
meet the standards for fire safety developed by Underwriters
Laboratories (UL) and does not have the UL label on the
controller.
Notes
Statutory Authority: RCW 76.04.015. 91-20-060 (Order 583), § 332-24-005, filed 9/24/91, effective 10/16/91; 87-11-005 (Order 504), § 332-24-005, filed 5/8/87.
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