The Occupational Safety and Health
Administration today issued a final rule to
increase protections for construction workers in confined spaces.
People working in confined spaces (such as manholes, crawl spaces, and tanks)
face life-threatening hazards including toxic substances, electrocutions,
explosions and asphyxiation.
Last year, two workers were
asphyxiated while repairing leaks in a manhole, the second when he went down to
save the first – which is not uncommon in cases of asphyxiation in confined
spaces.
"In the construction industry,
entering confined spaces is often necessary, but fatalities like these don't
have to happen," said Secretary of Labor Thomas E. Perez. "This new
rule will significantly improve the safety of construction workers who enter
confined spaces. In fact, we estimate that it will prevent about 780 serious
injuries every year."
The rule will provide construction
workers with protections similar to those manufacturing and general industry
workers have had for more than two decades, with some differences tailored to
the construction industry. These include requirements to ensure that multiple
employers share vital safety information and to continuously monitor hazards –
a safety option made possible by technological advances after the manufacturing
and general industry standards were created.
For more information, see the news release and visit
OSHA's webpage on Confined Spaces in Construction.
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