Don’t get stuck on HazCom label requirements
It’s been over a month since OSHA’s new Hazard Communication (HazCom) rule took effect on July 19. A look at your most frequently asked questions shows labeling requirements top the list.
Can we still use HMIS labels under the new rule?
Yes, that’s still an option for in-house labeling of hazardous chemicals. Workplace labeling requirements are found at 1910.1200(f)(6). Employers can either:
- Use the same label elements as required for shipped containers of hazardous chemicals: product identifier, signal word, hazard statement(s), pictogram(s), and precautionary statement(s). (Contact information is not required on in-house labels.) or
- Label in-house containers with the product identifier and words, pictures, symbols, or a combination of these, which provide at least general information regarding the hazards of the chemicals. This option includes the use of NFPA and HMIS labels.
We receive chemicals in rail and tank cars. Are they required to have a HazCom label or can it be sent with the shipping papers?
The new rule added paragraph (f)(5)(ii), which addresses labels for bulk shipments. Bulk shipments are hazardous chemicals transported where the mode of transportation IS the immediate container. This includes shipments via tanker truck, rail car, or intermodal container. Labels for bulk shipments must be:
- On the immediate container, or
- Transmitted with the shipping papers or the bills of lading, or
- Transmitted by technological or electronic means (if agreed to by the receiving entity).
OSHA says in the preamble to the final rule that this allows for the full label information to be available to the downstream user upon receipt while recognizing the unique Department of Transportation (DOT) placarding issues for bulk shipments.
Additionally, the new rule clarifies in (f)(5)(iii) that pictograms are not required when a pictogram for the same hazard is already required by the DOT to be on a shipped container.
Do the small container label requirements apply to secondary containers or all containers?
The small container labeling provisions at new paragraph (f)(12) apply to labels on shipped containers of hazardous chemicals (rather than in-house labels) where the chemical manufacturer, importer, or distributor can demonstrate that it’s not feasible to use pull-out labels, fold-back labels, or tags containing the full label information required by paragraph (f)(1).
For in-house labels, employers can continue to follow the requirements at (f)(6). If the secondary container is for “immediate use” – meaning that the hazardous chemical will be under the control of and used only by the person who transfers it from a labeled container and only within the work shift in which it is transferred – it doesn’t need to be labeled.
Key to remember: Overall, labeling requirements under 1910.1200 have not changed. However, the new rule adds provisions for labeling of bulk shipments and small containers.