OSHA makes corrections, technical amendments to 16 standards
2011-12-28T06:00:00Z
OSHA announced that it is correcting typographical errors and making non-substantive technical amendments to 16 standards. According to the agency, these revisions do not affect the substantive requirements or coverage of those standards, nor do they modify or revoke existing rights or obligations, or establish new rights or obligations.
A summary of the changes is as follows:
- Process Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals (§1910.119) — OSHA is correcting the Chemical Abstracts Service (CAS) number for Oleum, which appears in Appendix A.
- Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (§1910.120) — OSHA is revising the definition for ‘‘hazardous substance’’ to refer to Section 103(14) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act instead of 101(14).
- Permit-Required Confined Spaces (§1910.146) — OSHA is correcting a cross-reference to point to one of the practices employers must develop and implement for safe permit-space entry operations — specifically, “providing pedestrian, vehicle, or other barriers as necessary to protect entrants from external hazards.”
- Medical Services and First Aid (§§1910.151 and 1926.50) — OSHA is updating all references to recordkeeping forms in §§1910.151 and 1926.50 Appendix A, which establish requirements for medical services and first aid in general industry and construction.
- Servicing Multi-Piece and Single-Piece Rim Wheels (§1910.177) — OSHA is amending the definitions of “charts” in paragraph (b) of the standard to refer to the new Department of Labor charts (i.e., manuals or posters), or to any other information or poster that provides at least the same instructions, safety precautions, and other information contained in OSHA’s charts, and that is applicable to the types of rim wheels the employer is servicing. In addition, OSHA is revising Appendix B to provide current ordering information for the new OSHA manuals.
- Mechanical Power Presses (§1910.217) — OSHA is revising its provision, which requires employers to submit reports of employees injured while operating such presses to federal OSHA or, for state-plan states, the state agency administering the plan to also include the new title of the federal OSHA office designated to receive the reports and to provide an electronic address for submitting reports.
- Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills (§1910.261) — OSHA is correcting three errors involving incorrect cross references in this standard including the reference to outdated American National Standards Institute national consensus standards B15.1–1953, Safety Code for Mechanical Power-Transmission Apparatus, and A12.1–1967, Safety Requirements for Floor and Wall Openings, Railings, and Toeboards respectively.
- Sawmills (§1910.265) — OSHA is correcting a typographical error in a cross reference which should specify requirements for singular circular-head saws.
- Grain Handling Facilities (§1910.272) — OSHA is inserting a note in paragraph (a) of the standard stating that OSHA will enforce the standard, as it applies to marine terminals, consistent with the 1985 compliance directive.
- Commercial Diving Operations (§1910.440) — OSHA is removing the provision requiring employers to transfer hospitalization and decompression-related records to NIOSH after the five-year retention period.
- 13 Carcinogens (4-Nitrobiphenyl, etc.) (§1910.1003) — OSHA is deleting two cross references to a section of the standard that it removed in the second Standards Improvement Project rulemaking.
- Lead (§1910.1025 and § 1926.62) — OSHA is replacing the term “exceeds” with the phrase “is at or above” to designate the actionable blood-lead levels (i.e., 40 mg/dl) at which employers must notify their employees that the standard requires temporary medical removal with medical-removal protection benefits when an employee’s blood-lead level is at or above a specified level.
- Bloodborne Pathogens (§1910.1030) — OSHA is updating a cross reference requiring employers to maintain the sharps injury log for the period required by the recordkeeping rule, which became §1904.33.
- Air Contaminants (§1915.1000) — OSHA is correcting a typographical error in four places where the abbreviation for “parts per million is incorrectly shown as “p/m” instead of “ppm.”