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Methylene Chloride |
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| OSHA Standards |
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Exposures to methylene chloride are addressed in specific
standards for the general industry, shipyard employment and the construction
industry. This page highlights OSHA standards, preambles to final rules
(background to final rules), Federal Registers (rules, proposed rules, and notices), directives (instructions
for compliance officers), and standard interpretations (official letters of
interpretation of the standards) related to methylene chloride.
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".
| 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. |
Highlighted Standards
General Industry (29
CFR 1910)
Shipyard Employment (29
CFR 1915)
Construction Industry (29
CFR 1926)
Preambles to Final Rules
Federal Registers
- Methylene
Chloride; Final Rule. Final Rules 63:50711-50732, (1998, September 22). OSHA
amended its standard regulating occupational exposure to methylene chloride (29 CFR 1910.1052) by adding a provision for temporary medical removal protection benefits for
employees who are removed or transferred to another job because of a medical determination that exposure to methylene chloride may
aggravate or contribute to the employee's existing skin, heart, liver, or neurological disease.
- Search all available
Federal Registers.
Directives
Standard Interpretations
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