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NSC Utilities Div. Winter Meeting St. Petersburg Florida 2012 Presenter: Robert E. Lawless 1 NFPA 70E 2012 Update Brief.

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Presentation on theme: "NSC Utilities Div. Winter Meeting St. Petersburg Florida 2012 Presenter: Robert E. Lawless 1 NFPA 70E 2012 Update Brief."— Presentation transcript:

1 NSC Utilities Div. Winter Meeting St. Petersburg Florida 2012 Presenter: Robert E. Lawless 1 NFPA 70E 2012 Update Brief

2 Session Purpose In a 30 minute module: –Revisit purpose of the standard –Revisit scope of the standard under 2012 –Highlight Some 2012 revisions to the standard (underlined) 2

3 90.1 Purpose of NFPA 70E provide a practical safe working area for employees related to the hazards arising from the use of electricity. NFPA 70E is not intended to be used by untrained persons. 3

4 90.2 Scope of NFPA 70E 70E applies to employee work places. Electrical safety-related work practices… Latest revision adds inspection to activities covered also other work activities that can expose them to electrical hazards. (added) Installation of conductors & equip. that connect to the supply of electricity. (A) Covered under the 2012 revision: –installations used by the electric utility, such as office blgs., warehouses, garages, machine shops, & recreational buildings not part of a generating plant, substation, or control center. 4

5 90.2 (B) 5 Installations under exclusive control of facilities not covered clarified. Service drops or associated laterals, & associated metering, or located in legally established easements or rights-of-way designed by a public service commission or other reg. agency or on property owned or leased by the electric utility … 5

6 90.2 (B) Not Covered 70E 2012 states: This standard does not cover safety related work practices for the following: Installations in ships, watercraft, other than floating buildings, railway rolling stock, aircraft, or automotive vehicles. Installations underground in mines… Installations of railways for generation, transformation, transmission, or distribution exclusively for operation of rolling stock… & signaling & communication. 6

7 Not Covered Continued Installation of communication equipment under the exclusive control of communications utilities located outdoors or in building spaces used exclusively for such installations. Sec. 90.2(A) clarifies which portions of electric facilities are covered by NFPA 70E. 7

8 Is NFPA 70E an OSHA regulation? OSHA considers the NFPA standard a recognized industry practice, a consensus standard. The employer is required to conduct hazard assessments. Recent OSHA citations for non- compliance to 70E display the agency most often uses their PPE Standard for enforcement. 8

9 Article100 Chapter 1 Definitions Arc Flash Suit: Added new informational note citing examples of personal protective garments & equipment that can be used together to provide full body protection. Informational Note 1: Arc-rated clothing or equipment indicates that it has been tested for exposure to an electric arc. FR clothing w/o an arc rating has not been tested for exposure to an electric arc. 9

10 In an Arc Exposure “No clothing can be better than flammable clothing that ignites & melts.” 10

11 Definitions Contined Working On (energized electrical conductors or circuit parts): Revised by adding the word intentionally to distinguish that working on energized electrical conductors & circuit parts does not encompass inadvertent contact. 11

12 16 Annexes Annexes are not part of the requirements of this standard but are included for informational purposes only. The designation Informative has been installed leading into each Annex Title. Titles for Annex, D, F, H, have been revised to clarify focus. Added Informational Annex P. Aligning Implementation of This Standard with Occupational Health & Safety Mgt. Standards 12

13 110.1 (A) Host Employer Responsibilities Employees report any perceived contact to supervision immediately. Shall inform contract employer of: –Known hazards per this standard –Share information of the installation –Report observed contract-employer- related violations of the standard to contract employer 13

14 110.1(C ) Host Employer Responsibilities Continued Documenation There shall be a documented meeting between the host employer and the contract employer. 14

15 110.2 (D)(1) Employee Training An employee who is undergoing on-the-job training for the purpose of obtaining the skills & knowledge necessary to be considered a qualified person and who, in the course of such training, has demonstrated an ability to perform specific duties safely at his or her level of training and who is under direct supervision of a qualified person, shall be considered to be a qualified person for the performance of those specific duties. 15

16 110.2 (D)(1)(f) Employee Training The employer shall determine, through regular supervision or through inspections conducted on at least an annual basis, that each employee is complying with the safety-related work practices required by this standard. Unqualified Persons shall be trained in, and be familiar with any electrical safety-related practices necessary for their safety. 16

17 110.2 Employee Training Retraining shall be performed at intervals not to exceed 3 years. Revised to require that: the “content of training” be included in the training documentation. 110.2 (C ) Emergency Procedures training added automatic external defibrillator (AED) use to resuscitation methods. (all annually req’d) 17

18 120.2(B)(2) Employee Training New requirement for retraining of employees when established lock/out procedures are revised. 18

19 110.3 Electrical Safety Program (E) Revised to require that the electrical safety program identify the procedure for working within the arc flash boundary as well as the limited approach boundary. (F) Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment Procedure. An electrical SP shall include a hazard identification and a risk assessment procedure… The procedure shall identify the process to be used by the employee before work is started to ID hazards & assess risk … 19

20 110.3(H) Electrical Safety Program Revised to require a documented audit of the electrical safety program every 3 years and to require that field work be separately audited to verify that the requirements of the electrical SP are being followed and if not, what corrective measures are to implemented. The audit shall be documented. 20

21 110.(G)(1) Job Briefing General. Before starting each job, the employee in charge shall conduct a job briefing with the employees involved. The briefing shall cover... and the information on the energized electrical work permit, if required. Additional job briefings shall be held if changes that might affect the safety of employees occur during the course of the work. 21

22 110.4 (C ) GFCI Protection New requirement covering when GFCI protectin is required, the proper type of portable GFCI device permitted, and the required methods of protecting employees in outdoor locations who are using equipment operating at 125 volts, 15, 20, or 30 amps & equipment operating at other than 125 volt…. 22

23 110.5 Underground Elect. Lines New requirement covering underground electrical lines & equipment & the necessary steps to mark their location … 23

24 130.5 Exception Relocated from 130.3 Exception No. 1 of the 2009 edition of NFPA 70E and deleted exception exempting systems operating at 240 volts or less supplied by a single transformer rated 125 kVA or less from an arc flash hazard analysis. 24

25 130 Work Involving Electrical Hazards 130.2(B)(1) When Required. Revised to require energized work permit when work is performed within the limited approach boundary or the arc flash boundary of exposed energized conductors. 130.5(B)(1): Added reference to Table H.3(b) for information on selecting protective clothing & equipment when incident energy is calculated. 25

26 Equipment Labeling Exception Labels applied prior to Sept. 30, 2011 130.5 (C ): Revised to identify types of electrical equipment required to be labeled, & expanded & clarified information required… (1) At least one of the following: -Available incident energy & the corresponding working distance -Minimum arc rating of clothing -Required level of PPE -Highest Hazard/Risk Category (HRC) for the equipment. (2) Nominal System Voltage (3) Arc Flash Boundary 26

27 Identify the Hazard, Proper PPE No door, cover, guard, or barrier should be removed without unless you are trained, wearing correct PPE & positive of the state of the equipment and/or components it is guarding. 27

28 130 (C) Personal Protective equipment (1) General. Added: When an employee is working within the restricted approach boundary, the worker shall wear personal protective equipment in accordance with 130.4. (3) If employees use hairnets or beard nets, or both, these items must be arc rated. (See 130.7 (C)(10)(b) & ( C) for flash protection requirements. (5) Hearing Protection: Employees shall wear hearing protection whenever working within the arc flash boundary. 28

29 130.7(C )(9) Personal Protective Clothing Added: Garments that are not arc rated shall not be permitted to be used to increase the arc rating of a garment or of a clothing system. (10)(b) Head Protection –An arc-rated balaclava shall be used with an arc-rated faceshield when the back of the head is within the arc flash boundry. An arc rated hood shall be permitted to be ued instead of an arc-rated faceshield & balaclava. –An arc-rated hood shall be used when the anticipated incident energy exposure exceeds 12 cal/cm 2 29

30 130.7(10)(d) Hand Protection (1) Heavy duty leather glove or arc-rated gloves shall be worn where required for arc flash protection. Information Note: Heavy-duty leather gloves are made entirely of leather with minimum thickness of 0.03 in.(0.7mm), are unlined or lined with nonflammable, no-melting fabrics. Heavy-duty leather gloves meeting this requirement have been shown to have ATPV values in excess of 10cal/cm 2 30

31 130.7 (A) Personal & Other Protective Equipment Informational Note No. 2 “It is the collective experience of the Tech. Committee of Elect. Safety in the Workplace that normal operation of enclosed electrical equipment, operating at 600 volts or less, that has been properly installed & maintained by qualified persons is not likely to expose the employee to an electrical hazard.” 31

32 Encourage Total Review of 70E 2012 Revisions Always “Test Before Touch” 32


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