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Electrical Contractors Industry |
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Electrical hazards are addressed in
specific standards for recordkeeping, the general industry, shipyard employment, marine
terminals, and the construction industry. This page highlights OSHA standards,
the Regulatory Agenda (a list of actions being taken with regard to OSHA
standards), directives (instructions for compliance officers), standard interpretations (official letters of interpretation of the
standards), and national consensus standards related to the electrical contractors industry.
OSHA
Section 5(a)(1)
of the OSH Act, often referred to as the General Duty Clause, requires employers to "furnish to
each of his employees employment and a place of employment which are free from recognized hazards that
are causing or are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to his employees".
Section
5(a)(2) requires employers to "comply with occupational safety and health
standards promulgated under this Act".
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Note: Twenty-four states, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands have
OSHA-approved State Plans and have adopted their own standards and
enforcement policies. For the most part, these States adopt standards that are
identical to Federal OSHA. However, some States have adopted different standards
applicable to this topic or may have different enforcement policies. |
Frequently Cited Standards
The following standards, in order, were the most frequently cited by Federal OSHA
from October 2005 through September 2006, in Electrical
Work Industry Group (SIC
Code 1731).
- 1926.405,
Wiring methods, components, and equipment for general use
- 1926.403,
General requirements (electrical)
- 1926.404,
Wiring design and protection
- 1926.501,
Duty to have fall protection
- 1926.453,
Aerial lifts
- 1926.1053,
Ladders
- 1926.416,
General requirements (electrical)
- 1926.1052, Stairways
- 1926.20,
General safety and health provisions
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1926.21, Safety training and education
Other Highlighted Standards
- 1904, Recording and
reporting occupational injuries and illness
General Industry
(29 CFR
1910)
- 1910 Subpart
I, Personal protective equipment
- 1910 Subpart
J, General environmental controls
- 1910 Subpart
R, Special industries
- 1910 Subpart
S, Electrical
- 1910.302, Electric utilization systems
- 1910.303, General requirements
[related
topic page]
- 1910.304, Wiring design and protection
- 1910.305, Wiring methods, components, and equipment for general use
- 1910.306, Specific purpose equipment and installations
- 1910.307, Hazardous (classified) locations
- 1910.308, Special systems
- 1910.331, Scope
- 1910.332, Training
- 1910.333, Selection and use of work practices
- 1910.334, Use of equipment
- 1910.335, Safeguards for personnel protection
Shipyard Employment (29 CFR
1915)
Marine Terminals (29 CFR
1917)
Construction Industry
(29 CFR 1926)
- 1926 Subpart
K, Electrical
- 1926.402, Applicability
- 1926.403, General requirements
- 1926.404, Wiring design and protection
- 1926.405, Wiring methods, components, and equipment for general use
- 1926.406,
Specific purpose equipment and installations
- 1926.407, Hazardous (classified) locations
- 1926.408, Special systems
- 1926.416, General requirements
- 1926.417, Lockout and tagging of circuits
- 1926.431, Maintenance of equipment
- 1926.432, Environmental deterioration of equipment
- 1926.441, Batteries and battery charging
Regulatory Agenda
Directives
- Inspection Guidelines for 29 CFR 1910. Subpart I, the revised Personal Protective Equipment Standards for General
Industry. STD 01-06-006 [STD 1-6.6], (1995, June 16).
- Electrical Safety-Related Work Practices -- Inspection Procedures and Interpretation
Guidelines. STD 01-16-007 [STD 1-16.7], (1991, July 1).
- 29 CFR 1926.550(a)(15)(i) Clearance Between Electrical Power Lines and
Cranes. STD 03-12-001 [STD 3-12.1A], (1980, May 9).
- OSHA Technical
Manual (OTM). TED 01-00-015 [TED 1-0.15A], (1999, January 20).
- Enforcement of the Electrical Power Generation, Transmission, and Distribution Standard.
CPL 02-01-038 [CPL 2-1.38], (2003, June 18).
- Search all available directives.
Standard Interpretations
National Consensus
Note: These are NOT OSHA regulations. However, they do provide guidance from their originating
organizations related to worker protection.
American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
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