Nevada adopts heat illness prevention rule
Effective date: April 29, 2025
This applies to: Employers in Nevada with more than 10 employees who have potential heat exposure in indoor and outdoor settings. NOTE: Certain provisions of the regulation do not apply to employees who work indoors in climate-controlled environments, including those in vehicles with functioning climate control systems.
Description of change: Affected businesses must implement:
- A written job hazard analysis that identifies all working conditions with the potential to cause heat illness. The analysis is to focus on job classifications where the majority of employees have exposure for more than 30 minutes of any given hour, excluding break periods and must be performed:
- Before a task is performed for the first time by an employee, or
- When a task or job materially changes.
- A written safety program that identifies provisions for:
- Potable water, rest breaks, and means of cooling workers;
- Heat and temperature monitoring by a designated person;
- Work processes that prevent activities that generate additional heat or humidity;
- Emergency response procedures; and
- Employee training that includes the recognition of heat hazards and procedures to minimize those hazards.
The written safety program must also designate a person to perform hazard analysis, monitor heat, contact emergency services in the event of a heat-related emergency, and carry out provisions of the program.
The rule prohibits a collective bargaining agreement from reducing or waiving the regulatory requirements and does not relieve an employer from collective bargaining agreements.
View related state info: Heat Injury and Illness Prevention - Nevada