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			Subpart
			P—Fire Protection in Shipyard Employment 
			
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.501   General
			provisions. 
			
			(a) Purpose.
			The purpose of the standard in this subpart is to require
			employers to protect all employees from fire hazards in shipyard
			employment, including employees engaged in fire response
			activities. 
			
			(b) Scope.
			This subpart covers employers with employees engaged in shipyard
			employment aboard vessels and vessel sections, and on land-side
			operations regardless of geographic location. 
			
			(c) Employee
			participation. The employer
			must provide ways for employees or employee representatives, or
			both to participate in developing and periodically reviewing
			programs and policies adopted to comply with this subpart. 
			
			(d) Multi-employer
			worksites—(1) Host
			employer responsibilities.
			The host employer's responsibilities are to: 
			
			(i) Inform all employers at the worksite
			about the content of the fire safety plan including hazards,
			controls, fire safety and health rules, and emergency procedures; 
			
			(ii) Make sure the safety and health
			responsibilities for fire protection are assigned as appropriate
			to other employers at the worksite; and 
			
			(iii) If there is more than one host
			employer, each host employer must communicate relevant information
			about fire-related hazards to other host employers. When a vessel
			owner or operator (temporarily) becomes a host shipyard employer
			by directing the work of ships' crews on repair or modification of
			the vessel or by hiring other contractors directly, the vessel
			owner or operator must also comply with these provisions for host
			employers. 
			
			(2) Contract
			employer responsibilities.
			The contract employer's responsibilities are to: 
			
			(i) Make sure that the host employer
			knows about the fire-related hazards associated with the contract
			employer's work and what the contract employer is doing to address
			them; and 
			
			(ii) Advise the host employer of any
			previously unidentified fire-related hazards that the contract
			employer identifies at the worksite. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.502   Fire
			safety plan. 
			
			(a) Employer
			responsibilities. The
			employer must develop and implement a written fire safety plan
			that covers all the actions that employers and employees must take
			to ensure employee safety in the event of a fire. (See Appendix A
			to this subpart for a Model Fire Safety Plan.) 
			
			(b) Plan
			elements. The employer must
			include the following information in the fire safety plan: 
			
			(1) Identification of the significant
			fire hazards; 
			
			(2) Procedures for recognizing and
			reporting unsafe conditions; 
			
			(3) Alarm procedures; 
			
			(4) Procedures for notifying employees
			of a fire emergency; 
			
			(5) Procedures for notifying fire
			response organizations of a fire emergency; 
			
			(6) Procedures for evacuation; 
			
			(7) Procedures to account for all
			employees after an evacuation; and 
			
			(8) Names, job titles, or departments
			for individuals who can be contacted for further information about
			the plan. 
			
			(c) Reviewing
			the plan with employees. The
			employer must review the plan with each employee at the following
			times: 
			
			(1) Within 90 days of December 14, 2004,
			for employees who are currently working; 
			
			(2) Upon initial assignment for new
			employees; and 
			
			(3) When the actions the employee must
			take under the plan change because of a change in duties or a
			change in the plan. 
			
			(d) Additional
			employer requirements. The
			employer also must: 
			
			(1) Keep the plan accessible to
			employees, employee representatives, and OSHA; 
			
			(2) Review and update the plan whenever
			necessary, but at least annually; 
			
			(3) Document that affected employees
			have been informed about the plan as required by paragraph (c) of
			this section; and 
			
			(4) Ensure any outside fire response
			organization that the employer expects to respond to fires at the
			employer's worksite has been given a copy of the current plan. 
			
			(e) Contract
			employers. Contract employers
			in shipyard employment must have a fire safety plan for their
			employees, and this plan must comply with the host employer's fire
			safety plan. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.503   Precautions
			for hot work. 
			
			(a) General
			requirements—(1)
			Designated Areas.
			The employer may designate areas for hot work in sites such as
			vessels, vessel sections, fabricating shops, and subassembly areas
			that are free of fire hazards. 
			
			(2) Non-designated
			Areas. (i) Before authorizing
			hot work in a non-designated area, the employer must visually
			inspect the area where hot work is to be performed, including
			adjacent spaces, to ensure the area is free of fire hazards,
			unless a Marine Chemist's certificate or Shipyard Competent
			Person's log is used for authorization. 
			
			(ii) The employer shall authorize
			employees to perform hot work only in areas that are free of fire
			hazards, or that have been controlled by physical isolation, fire
			watches, or other positive means. 
			
			Note
			to paragraph (a)(2):
			The requirements of paragraph (a)(2) apply to all hot work
			operations in shipyard employment except those covered by
			§1915.14. 
			
			(b) Specific
			requirements—(1)
			Maintaining fire hazard-free
			conditions. The employer must
			keep all hot work areas free of new hazards that may cause or
			contribute to the spread of fire. Unexpected energizing and energy
			release are covered by 29 CFR 1915.181, Subpart L. Exposure to
			toxic and hazardous substances is covered in 29 CFR 1915.1000
			through 1915.1450, subpart Z. 
			
			(2) Fuel
			gas and oxygen supply lines and torches.
			The employer must make sure that: 
			
			(i) No unattended fuel gas and oxygen
			hose lines or torches are in confined spaces; 
			
			(ii) No unattended charged fuel gas and
			oxygen hose lines or torches are in enclosed spaces for more than
			15 minutes; and 
			
			(iii) All fuel gas and oxygen hose lines
			are disconnected at the supply manifold at the end of each shift; 
			
			(iv) All disconnected fuel gas and
			oxygen hose lines are rolled back to the supply manifold or to
			open air to disconnect the torch; or extended fuel gas and oxygen
			hose lines are not reconnected at the supply manifold unless the
			lines are given a positive means of identification when they were
			first connected and the lines are tested using a drop test or
			other positive means to ensure the integrity of fuel gas and
			oxygen burning system. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.504   Fire
			watches. 
			
			(a) Written
			fire watch policy. The
			employer must create and keep current a written policy that
			specifies the following requirements for employees performing fire
			watch in the workplace: 
			
			(1) The training employees must be given
			(§1915.508(c) contains detailed fire watch training
			requirements); 
			
			(2) The duties employees are to perform; 
			
			(3) The equipment employees must be
			given; and 
			
			(4) The personal protective equipment
			(PPE) that must be made available and worn as required by 29 CFR
			Part 1915, Subpart I. 
			
			(b) Posting
			fire watches. The employer
			must post a fire watch if during hot work any of the following
			conditions are present: 
			
			(1) Slag, weld splatter, or sparks might
			pass through an opening and cause a fire; 
			
			(2) Fire-resistant guards or curtains
			are not used to prevent ignition of combustible materials on or
			near decks, bulkheads, partitions, or overheads; 
			
			(3) Combustible material closer than 35
			ft. (10.7m) to the hot work in either the horizontal or vertical
			direction cannot be removed, protected with flame-proof covers, or
			otherwise shielded with metal or fire-resistant guards or
			curtains; 
			
			(4) The hot work is carried out on or
			near insulation, combustible coatings, or sandwich-type
			construction that cannot be shielded, cut back, or removed, or in
			a space within a sandwich type construction that cannot be
			inerted; 
			
			(5) Combustible materials adjacent to
			the opposite sides of bulkheads, decks, overheads, metal
			partitions, or sandwich-type construction may be ignited by
			conduction or radiation; 
			
			(6) The hot work is close enough to
			cause ignition through heat radiation or conduction on the
			following: 
			
			(i) Insulated pipes, bulkheads, decks,
			partitions, or overheads; or 
			
			(ii) Combustible materials and/or
			coatings; 
			
			(7) The work is close enough to
			unprotected combustible pipe or cable runs to cause ignition; or 
			
			(8) A Marine Chemist, a Coast
			Guard-authorized person, or a shipyard Competent Person, as
			defined in 29 CFR Part 1915, Subpart B, requires that a fire watch
			be posted. 
			
			(c) Assigning
			employees to fire watch duty.
			(1) The employer must not assign other duties to a fire watch
			while the hot work is in progress. 
			
			(2) Employers must ensure that employees
			assigned to fire watch duty: 
			
			(i) Have a clear view of and immediate
			access to all areas included in the fire watch; 
			
			(ii) Are able to communicate with
			workers exposed to hot work; 
			
			(iii) Are authorized to stop work if
			necessary and restore safe conditions within the hot work area; 
			
			(iv) Remain in the hot work area for at
			least 30 minutes after completion of the hot work, unless the
			employer or its representative surveys the exposed area and makes
			a determination that there is no further fire hazard; 
			
			(v) Are trained to detect fires that
			occur in areas exposed to the hot work; 
			
			(vi) Attempt to extinguish any incipient
			stage fires in the hot work area that are within the capability of
			available equipment and within the fire watch's training
			qualifications, as defined in §1915.508; 
			
			(vii) Alert employees of any fire beyond
			the incipient stage; and 
			
			(viii) If unable to extinguish fire in
			the areas exposed to the hot work, activate the alarm. 
			
			(3) The employer must ensure that
			employees assigned to fire watch are physically capable of
			performing these duties. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.505   Fire
			response. 
			
			(a) Employer
			responsibilities. The
			employer must: 
			
			(1) Decide what type of response will be
			provided and who will provide it; and 
			
			(2) Create, maintain, and update a
			written policy that: 
			
			(i) Describes the internal and outside
			fire response organizations that the employer will use; and 
			
			(ii) Defines what evacuation procedures
			employees must follow, if the employer chooses to require a total
			or partial evacuation of the worksite at the time of a fire. 
			
			(b) Required
			written policy information—(1)
			Internal fire response.
			If an internal fire response is to be used, the employer must
			include the following information in the employer's written
			policy: 
			
			(i) The basic structure of the fire
			response organization; 
			
			(ii) The number of trained fire response
			employees; 
			
			(iii) The fire response functions that
			may need to be carried out; 
			
			(iv) The minimum number of fire response
			employees necessary, the number and types of apparatuses, and a
			description of the fire suppression operations established by
			written standard operating procedures for each type of fire
			response at the employer's facility; 
			
			(v) The type, amount, and frequency of
			training that must be given to fire response employees; and 
			
			(vi) The procedures for using protective
			clothing and equipment. 
			
			(2) Outside
			fire response. If an outside
			fire response organization is used, the employer must include the
			following information in the written policy: 
			
			(i) The types of fire suppression
			incidents to which the fire response organization is expected to
			respond at the employer's facility or worksite; 
			
			(ii) The liaisons between the employer
			and the outside fire response organizations; and 
			
			(iii) A plan for fire response functions
			that: 
			
			(A) Addresses procedures for obtaining
			assistance from the outside fire response organization; 
			
			(B) Familiarizes the outside fire
			response organization with the layout of the employer's facility
			or worksite, including access routes to controlled areas, and
			site-specific operations, occupancies, vessels or vessel sections,
			and hazards; and, 
			
			(C) Sets forth how hose and coupling
			connection threads are to be made compatible and includes where
			the adapter couplings are kept; or 
			
			(D) States that the employer will not
			allow the use of incompatible hose connections. 
			
			(3) A
			combination of internal and outside fire response.
			If a combination of internal and outside fire response is to be
			used, the employer must include the following information, in
			addition to the requirements in paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this
			section, in the written policy: 
			
			(i) The basic organizational structure
			of the combined fire response; 
			
			(ii) The number of combined trained fire
			responders; 
			
			(iii) The fire response functions that
			may need to be carried out; 
			
			(iv) The minimum number of fire response
			employees necessary, the number and types of apparatuses, and a
			description of the fire suppression operations established by
			written standard operating procedures for each particular type of
			fire response at the worksite; and 
			
			(v) The type, amount, and frequency of
			joint training with outside fire response organizations if given
			to fire response employees. 
			
			(4) Employee
			evacuation. The employer must
			include the following information in the employer's written
			policy: 
			
			(i) Emergency escape procedures; 
			
			(ii) Procedures to be followed by
			employees who may remain longer at the worksite to perform
			critical shipyard employment operations during the evacuation; 
			
			(iii) Procedures to account for all
			employees after emergency evacuation is completed; 
			
			(iv) The preferred means of reporting
			fires and other emergencies; and 
			
			(v) Names or job titles of the employees
			or departments to be contacted for further information or
			explanation of duties. 
			
			(5) Rescue
			and emergency response. The
			employer must include the following information in the employer's
			written policy: 
			
			(i) A description of the emergency
			rescue procedures; and 
			
			(ii) Names or job titles of the
			employees who are assigned to perform them. 
			
			(c) Medical
			requirements for shipyard fire response employees.
			The employer must ensure that: 
			
			(1) All fire response employees receive
			medical examinations to assure that they are physically and
			medically fit for the duties they are expected to perform; 
			
			(2) Fire response employees, who are
			required to wear respirators in performing their duties, meet the
			medical requirements of §1915.154; 
			
			(3) Each fire response employee has an
			annual medical examination; and 
			
			(4) The medical records of fire response
			employees are kept in accordance with §1915.1020. 
			
			(d) Organization
			of internal fire response functions.
			The employer must: 
			
			(1) Organize fire response functions to
			ensure enough resources to conduct emergency operations safely; 
			
			(2) Establish lines of authority and
			assign responsibilities to ensure that the components of the
			internal fire response are accomplished; 
			
			(3) Set up an incident management system
			to coordinate and direct fire response functions, including: 
			
			(i) Specific fire emergency
			responsibilities; 
			
			(ii) Accountability for all fire
			response employees participating in an emergency operation; and 
			
			(iii) Resources offered by outside
			organizations; and 
			
			(4) Provide the information required in
			this paragraph (d) to the outside fire response organization to be
			used. 
			
			(e) Personal
			protective clothing and equipment for fire response employees—(1)
			General requirements.
			The employer must: 
			
			(i) Supply to all fire response
			employees, at no cost, the appropriate personal protective
			clothing and equipment they may need to perform expected duties;
			and 
			
			(ii) Ensure that fire response employees
			wear the appropriate personal protective clothing and use the
			equipment, when necessary, to protect them from hazardous
			exposures. 
			
			(2) Thermal
			stability and flame resistance.
			The employer must: 
			
			(i) Ensure that each fire response
			employee exposed to the hazards of flame does not wear clothing
			that could increase the extent of injury that could be sustained;
			and 
			
			(ii) Prohibit wearing clothing made from
			acetate, nylon, or polyester, either alone or in blends, unless it
			can be shown that: 
			
			(A) The fabric will withstand the
			flammability hazard that may be encountered; or 
			
			(B) The clothing will be worn in such a
			way to eliminate the flammability hazard that may be encountered. 
			
			(3) Respiratory
			protection. The employer
			must: 
			
			(i) Provide self-contained breathing
			apparatus (SCBA) to all fire response employees involved in an
			emergency operation in an atmosphere that is immediately dangerous
			to life or health (IDLH), potentially IDLH, or unknown; 
			
			(ii) Provide SCBA to fire response
			employees performing emergency operations during hazardous
			chemical emergencies that will expose them to known hazardous
			chemicals in vapor form or to unknown chemicals; 
			
			(iii) Provide fire response employees
			who perform or support emergency operations that will expose them
			to hazardous chemicals in liquid form either: 
			
			(A) SCBA, or 
			
			(B) Respiratory protective devices
			certified by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
			Health (NIOSH) under 42 CFR Part 84 as suitable for the specific
			chemical environment; 
			
			(iv) Ensure that additional outside air
			supplies used in conjunction with SCBA result in positive pressure
			systems that are certified by NIOSH under 42 CFR Part 84; 
			
			(v) Provide only SCBA that meet the
			requirements of NFPA 1981-2002 Standard on Open-Circuit
			Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus for Fire and Emergency Services
			(incorporated by reference, see §1915.5); and 
			
			(vi) Ensure that the respiratory
			protection program and all respiratory protection equipment comply
			with §1915.154. 
			
			(4) Interior
			structural firefighting operations.
			The employer must: 
			
			(i) Supply at no cost to all fire
			response employees exposed to the hazards of shipyard fire
			response, a helmet, gloves, footwear, and protective hoods, and
			either a protective coat and trousers or a protective coverall;
			and 
			
			(ii) Ensure that this equipment meets
			the applicable recommendations in NFPA 1971-2000 Standard on
			Protective Ensemble for Structural Fire Fighting (incorporated by
			reference, see §1915.5). 
			
			(5) Proximity
			firefighting operations. The
			employer must provide, at no cost, to all fire response employees
			who are exposed to the hazards of proximity firefighting,
			appropriate protective proximity clothing meets the applicable
			recommendations in NFPA 1976-2000 Standard on Protective Ensemble
			for Proximity Fire Fighting (incorporated by reference, see
			§1915.5). 
			
			(6) Personal
			Alert Safety System (PASS) devices.
			The employer must: 
			
			(i) Provide each fire response employee
			involved in firefighting operations with a PASS device; and 
			
			(ii) Ensure that each PASS device meets
			the recommendations in NFPA 1982-1998 Standard on Personal Alert
			Safety Systems (PASS), (incorporated by reference, see §1915.5). 
			
			(7) Life
			safety ropes, body harnesses, and hardware.
			The employer must ensure that: 
			
			(i) All life safety ropes, body
			harnesses, and hardware used by fire response employees for
			emergency operations meet the applicable recommendations in NFPA
			1983-2001, Standard on Fire Service Life Safety Rope and System
			Components (incorporated by reference, see §1915.5); 
			
			(ii) Fire response employees use only
			Class I body harnesses to attach to ladders and aerial devices;
			and 
			
			(iii) Fire response employees use only
			Class II and Class III body harnesses for fall arrest and
			rappelling operations. 
			
			(f) Equipment
			maintenance—(1)
			Personal protective equipment.
			The employer must inspect and maintain personal protective
			equipment used to protect fire response employees to ensure that
			it provides the intended protection. 
			
			(2) Fire
			response equipment. The
			employer must: 
			
			(i) Keep fire response equipment in a
			state of readiness; 
			
			(ii) Standardize all fire hose coupling
			and connection threads throughout the facility and on vessels and
			vessel sections by providing the same type of hose coupling and
			connection threads for hoses of the same or similar diameter; and 
			
			(iii) Ensure that either all fire hoses
			and coupling connection threads are the same within a facility or
			vessel or vessel section as those used by the outside fire
			response organization, or supply suitable adapter couplings if
			such an organization is expected to use the fire response
			equipment within a facility or vessel or vessel section. 
			
			[69
			FR 55702, Sept. 15, 2004, as amended at 71 FR 60847, Oct. 17,
			2006] 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.506   Hazards
			of fixed extinguishing systems on board vessels and vessel
			sections. 
			
			(a) Employer
			responsibilities. The
			employer must comply with the provisions of this section whenever
			employees are exposed to fixed extinguishing systems that could
			create a dangerous atmosphere when activated in vessels and vessel
			sections, regardless of geographic location. 
			
			(b) Requirements
			for automatic and manual systems.
			Before any work is done in a space equipped with fixed
			extinguishing systems, the employer must either: 
			
			(1) Physically isolate the systems or
			use other positive means to prevent the systems' discharge; or 
			
			(2) Ensure employees are trained to
			recognize: 
			
			(i) Systems' discharge and evacuation
			alarms and the appropriate escape routes; and 
			
			(ii) Hazards associated with the
			extinguishing systems and agents including the dangers of
			disturbing system components and equipment such as piping, cables,
			linkages, detection devices, activation devices, and alarm
			devices. 
			
			(c) Sea
			and dock trials. During
			trials, the employer must ensure that all systems shall remain
			operational. 
			
			(d) Doors
			and hatches. The employer
			must: 
			
			(1) Take protective measures to ensure
			that all doors, hatches, scuttles, and other exit openings remain
			working and accessible for escape in the event the systems are
			activated; and 
			
			(2) Ensure that all inward opening
			doors, hatches, scuttles, and other potential barriers to safe
			exit are removed, locked open, braced, or otherwise secured so
			that they remain open and accessible for escape if systems'
			activation could result in a positive pressure in the protected
			spaces sufficient to impede escape. 
			
			(e) Testing
			the system. (1) When testing
			a fixed extinguishing system involves a total discharge of
			extinguishing medium into a space, the employer must evacuate all
			employees from the space and assure that no employees remain in
			the space during the discharge. The employer must retest the
			atmosphere in accordance with §1915.12 to ensure that the
			oxygen levels are safe for employees to enter. 
			
			(2) When testing a fixed extinguishing
			system does not involve a total discharge of the systems
			extinguishing medium, the employer must make sure that the
			system's extinguishing medium is physically isolated and that all
			employees not directly involved in the testing are evacuated from
			the protected space. 
			
			(f) Conducting
			system maintenance. Before
			conducting maintenance on a fixed extinguishing system, the
			employer must ensure that the system is physically isolated. 
			
			(g) Using
			fixed manual extinguishing systems for fire protection.
			If fixed manual extinguishing systems are used to provide fire
			protection for spaces in which the employees are working, the
			employer must ensure that: 
			
			(1) Only authorized employees are
			allowed to activate the system; 
			
			(2) Authorized employees are trained to
			operate and activate the systems; and 
			
			(3) All employees are evacuated from the
			protected spaces, and accounted for, before the fixed manual
			extinguishing system is activated. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.507   Land-side
			fire protection systems. 
			
			(a) Employer
			responsibilities. The
			employer must ensure all fixed and portable fire protection
			systems needed to meet an OSHA standard for employee safety or
			employee protection from fire hazards in land-side facilities,
			including, but not limited to, buildings, structures, and
			equipment, meet the requirements of this section. 
			
			(b) Portable
			fire extinguishers and hose systems.
			(1) The employer must select, install, inspect, maintain, and test
			all portable fire extinguishers according to NFPA 10-2002 Standard
			for Portable Fire Extinguishers (incorporated by reference, see
			§1915.5). 
			
			(2) The employer is permitted to use
			Class II or Class III hose systems, in accordance with NFPA
			10-2002 (incorporated by reference, see §1915.5), as portable
			fire extinguishers if the employer selects, installs, inspects,
			maintains, and tests those systems according to the specific
			recommendations in NFPA 14-2003 Standard for the Installation of
			Standpipe and Hose Systems (incorporated by reference, see
			§1915.5). 
			 
			
			(c) General
			requirements for fixed extinguishing systems.
			The employer must: 
			
			(1) Ensure that any fixed extinguishing
			system component or extinguishing agent is approved by an OSHA
			Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory, meeting the requirements
			of 29 CFR 1910.7, for use on the specific hazards the employer
			expects it to control or extinguish; 
			
			(2) Notify employees and take the
			necessary precautions to ensure employees are safe from fire if
			for any reason a fire extinguishing system stops working, until
			the system is working again; 
			
			(3) Ensure all repairs to fire
			extinguishing systems and equipment are done by a qualified
			technician or mechanic; 
			
			(4) Provide and ensure employees use
			proper personal protective equipment when entering discharge areas
			in which the atmosphere remains hazardous to employee safety or
			health, or provide safeguards to prevent employees from entering
			those areas. See §1915.12 for additional requirements
			applicable to safe entry into spaces containing dangerous
			atmospheres; 
			
			(5) Post hazard warning or caution signs
			at both the entrance to and inside of areas protected by fixed
			extinguishing systems that use extinguishing agents in
			concentrations known to be hazardous to employee safety or health;
			and 
			
			(6) Select, install, inspect, maintain,
			and test all automatic fire detection systems and emergency alarms
			according to NFPA 72-2002 National Fire Alarm Code (incorporated
			by reference, see §1915.5) 
			
			(d) Fixed
			extinguishing systems. The
			employer must select, install, maintain, inspect, and test all
			fixed systems required by OSHA as follows: 
			
			(1) Standpipe and hose systems according
			to NFPA 14-2003 Standard for the Installation of Standpipe and
			Hose Systems (incorporated by reference, see §1915.5); 
			
			(2) Automatic sprinkler systems
			according to NFPA 25-2002 Standard for the Inspection, Testing,
			and Maintenance of Water-based Fire Protection Systems,
			(incorporated by reference, see §1915.5), and either (i) NFPA
			13-2002 Standard for the Installation of Sprinkler Systems
			(incorporated by reference, see §1915.5), or (ii) NFPA
			750-2003 Standard on Water Mist Fire Protection Systems
			(incorporated by reference, see §1915.5); 
			
			(3) Fixed extinguishing systems that use
			water or foam as the extinguishing agent according to NFPA 15-2001
			Standard for Water Spray Fixed Systems for Fire Protection
			(incorporated by reference, see §1915.5) and NFPA 11-2005
			Standard for Low-, Medium-, and High-Expansion Foam (incorporated
			by reference, see §1915.5); 
			
			(4) Fixed extinguishing systems using
			dry chemical as the extinguishing agent according to NFPA 17-2002
			Standard for Dry Chemical Extinguishing Systems (incorporated by
			reference, see §1915.5); and 
			
			(5) Fixed extinguishing systems using
			gas as the extinguishing agent according to NFPA 12-2005 Standard
			on Carbon Dioxide Extinguishing Systems (incorporated by
			reference, see §1915.5); NFPA 12A-2004 Standard on Halon 1301
			Fire Extinguishing Systems (incorporated by reference, see
			§1915.5); and NFPA 2001-2004 Standard on Clean Agent Fire
			Extinguishing Systems (incorporated by reference, see §1915.5). 
			
			[69
			FR 55702, Sept. 15, 2004, as amended at 71 FR 60847, Oct. 17,
			2006] 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.508   Training. 
			
			(a) The employer must train employees in
			the applicable requirements of this section: 
			
			(1) Within 90 days of December 14, 2004,
			for employees currently working; 
			
			(2) Upon initial assignment for new
			employees; and 
			
			(3) When necessary to maintain
			proficiency for employees previously trained. 
			
			(b) Employee
			training. The employer must
			ensure that all employees are trained on: 
			
			(1) The emergency alarm signals,
			including system discharge alarms and employee evacuation alarms;
			and 
			
			(2) The primary and secondary evacuation
			routes that employees must use in the event of a fire in the
			workplace. While all vessels and vessel sections must have a
			primary evacuation route, a secondary evacuation route is not
			required when impracticable. 
			
			(c) Additional
			training requirements for employees expected to fight incipient
			stage fires. The employer
			must ensure that employees expected to fight incipient stage fires
			are trained on the following: 
			
			(1) The general principles of using fire
			extinguishers or hose lines, the hazards involved with incipient
			firefighting, and the procedures used to reduce these hazards; 
			
			(2) The hazards associated with fixed
			and portable fire protection systems that employees may use or to
			which they may be exposed during discharge of those systems; and 
			
			(3) The activation and operation of
			fixed and portable fire protection systems that the employer
			expects employees to use in the workplace. 
			
			(d) Additional
			training requirements for shipyard employees designated for fire
			response. The employer must: 
			
			(1) Have a written training policy
			stating that fire response employees must be trained and capable
			of carrying out their duties and responsibilities at all times; 
			
			(2) Keep written standard operating
			procedures that address anticipated emergency operations and
			update these procedures as necessary; 
			
			(3) Review fire response employee
			training programs and hands-on sessions before they are used in
			fire response training to make sure that fire response employees
			are protected from hazards associated with fire response training; 
			
			(4) Provide training for fire response
			employees that ensures they are capable of carrying out their
			duties and responsibilities under the employer's standard
			operating procedures; 
			
			(5) Train new fire response employees
			before they engage in emergency operations; 
			
			(6) At least quarterly, provide training
			on the written operating procedures to fire response employees who
			are expected to fight fires; 
			
			(7) Use qualified instructors to conduct
			the training; 
			
			(8) Conduct any training that involves
			live fire response exercises in accordance with NFPA 1403-2002
			Standard on Live Fire Training Evolutions (incorporated by
			reference, see §1915.5); 
			
			(9) Conduct semi-annual drills according
			to the employer's written procedures for fire response employees
			that cover site-specific operations, occupancies, buildings,
			vessels and vessel sections, and fire-related hazards; and 
			
			(10) Prohibit the use of smoke
			generating devices that create a dangerous atmosphere in training
			exercises. 
			
			(e) Additional
			training requirements for fire watch duty.
			(1) The employer must ensure that each fire watch is trained by an
			instructor with adequate fire watch knowledge and experience to
			cover the items as follows: 
			
			(i) Before being assigned to fire watch
			duty; 
			
			(ii) Whenever there is a change in
			operations that presents a new or different hazard; 
			
			(iii) Whenever the employer has reason
			to believe that the fire watch's knowledge, skills, or
			understanding of the training previously provided is inadequate;
			and 
			
			(iv) Annually. 
			
			(2) The employer must ensure that each
			employee who stands fire watch duty is trained in: 
			
			(i) The basics of fire behavior, the
			different classes of fire and of extinguishing agents, the stages
			of fire, and methods for extinguishing fires; 
			
			(ii) Extinguishing live fire scenarios
			whenever allowed by local and federal law; 
			
			(iii) The recognition of the adverse
			health effects that may be caused by exposure to fire; 
			
			(iv) The physical characteristics of the
			hot work area; 
			
			(v) The hazards associated with fire
			watch duties; 
			
			(vi) The personal protective equipment
			(PPE) needed to perform fire watch duties safely; 
			
			(vii) The use of PPE; 
			
			(viii) The selection and use of any fire
			extinguishers and fire hoses likely to be used by a fire watch in
			the work area; 
			
			(ix) The location and use of barriers; 
			
			(x) The means of communication
			designated by the employer for fire watches; 
			
			(xi) When and how to start fire alarm
			procedures; and 
			
			(xii) The employer's evacuation plan. 
			
			(3) The employer must ensure that each
			fire watch is trained to alert others to exit the space whenever: 
			
			(i) The fire watch perceives an unsafe
			condition; 
			
			(ii) The fire watch perceives that a
			worker performing hot work is in danger; 
			
			(iii) The employer or a representative
			of the employer orders an evacuation; or 
			
			(iv) An evacuation signal, such as an
			alarm, is activated. 
			
			(f) Records.
			The employer must keep records that demonstrate that employees
			have been trained as required by paragraphs (a) through (e) of
			this section. 
			
			(1) The employer must ensure that the
			records include the employee's name; the trainer's name; the type
			of training; and the date(s) on which the training took place. 
			
			(2) The employer must keep each training
			record for one year from the time it was made or until it is
			replaced with a new training record, whichever is shorter, and
			make it available for inspection and copying by OSHA on request. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			§1915.509   Definitions
			applicable to this subpart. 
			
			Alarm—a
			signal or message from a person or device that indicates that
			there is a fire, medical emergency, or other situation that
			requires emergency response or evacuation. At some shipyards, this
			may be called an “incident” or a “call for
			service.” 
			
			Alarm system—a
			system that warns employees at the worksite of danger. 
			
			Body harness—a
			system of straps that may be secured about the employee in a
			manner that will distribute the fall arrest forces over at least
			the thighs, shoulders, chest, and pelvis, with means for attaching
			it to other components of a personal fall arrest system. 
			
			Class II standpipe system—a
			11⁄2
			inch (3.8 cm) hose system which provides a means for the control
			or extinguishment of incipient stage fires. 
			
			Contract employer—an
			employer, such as a painter, joiner, carpenter, or scaffolding
			sub-contractor, who performs work under contract to the host
			employer or to another employer under contract to the host
			employer at the host employer's worksite. This excludes employers
			who provide incidental services that do not influence shipyard
			employment (such as mail delivery or office supply services). 
			
			Dangerous atmosphere—an
			atmosphere that may expose employees to the risk of death,
			incapacitation, injury, acute illness, or impairment of ability to
			self-rescue (i.e.,
			escape unaided from a confined or enclosed space). 
			
			Designated area—an
			area established for hot work after an inspection that is free of
			fire hazards. 
			
			Drop Test—a
			method utilizing gauges to ensure the integrity of an oxygen fuel
			gas burning system. The method requires that the burning torch is
			installed to one end of the oxygen and fuel gas lines and then the
			gauges are attached to the other end of the hoses. The manifold or
			cylinder supply valve is opened and the system is pressurized. The
			manifold or cylinder supply valve is then closed and the gauges
			are watched for at least sixty (60) seconds. Any drop in pressure
			indicates a leak. 
			
			Emergency operations—activities
			performed by fire response organizations that are related to:
			rescue, fire suppression, emergency medical care, and special
			operations or activities that include responding to the scene of
			an incident and all activities performed at that scene. 
			
			Fire hazard—a
			condition or material that may start or contribute to the spread
			of fire. 
			
			Fire protection—methods
			of providing fire prevention, response, detection, control,
			extinguishment, and engineering. 
			
			Fire response—the
			activity taken by the employer at the time of an emergency
			incident involving a fire at the worksite, including fire
			suppression activities carried out by internal or external
			resources or a combination of both, or total or partial employee
			evacuation of the area exposed to the fire. 
			
			Fire response employee—a
			shipyard employee who carries out the duties and responsibilities
			of shipyard firefighting in accordance with the fire safety plan. 
			
			Fire response organization—an
			organized group knowledgeable, trained, and skilled in shipyard
			firefighting operations that responds to shipyard fire
			emergencies, including: fire brigades, shipyard fire departments,
			private or contractual fire departments, and municipal fire
			departments. 
			
			Fire suppression—the
			activities involved in controlling and extinguishing fires. 
			
			Fire watch—the
			activity of observing and responding to the fire hazards
			associated with hot work in shipyard employment and the employees
			designated to do so. 
			
			Fixed extinguishing system—a
			permanently installed fire protection system that either
			extinguishes or controls fire occurring in the space it protects. 
			
			Flammable liquid—any
			liquid having a flashpoint below 100 °F (37.8 °C), except
			any mixture having components with flashpoints of 100 °F (37.8
			°C) or higher, the total of which make up 99 percent or more
			of the total volume of the mixture. 
			
			Hazardous substance—a
			substance likely to cause injury by reason of being explosive,
			flammable, poisonous, corrosive, oxidizing, an irritant, or
			otherwise harmful. 
			
			Hose systems—fire
			protection systems consisting of a water supply, approved fire
			hose, and a means to control the flow of water at the output end
			of the hose. 
			
			Host employer—an
			employer who is in charge of coordinating work or who hires other
			employers to perform work at a multi-employer workplace. 
			
			Incident management system—a
			system that defines the roles and responsibilities to be assumed
			by personnel and the operating procedures to be used in the
			management and direction of emergency operations; the system is
			also referred to as an “incident command system”
			(ICS). 
			
			Incipient stage fire—a
			fire, in the initial or beginning stage, which can be controlled
			or extinguished by portable fire extinguishers, Class II standpipe
			or small hose systems without the need for protective clothing or
			breathing apparatus. 
			
			Inerting—the
			displacement of the atmosphere in a permit space by noncombustible
			gas (such as nitrogen) to such an extent that the resulting
			atmosphere is noncombustible. This procedure produces an IDLH
			oxygen-deficient atmosphere. 
			
			Interior structural firefighting
			operations—the physical
			activity of fire response, rescue, or both involving a fire beyond
			the incipient stage inside of buildings, enclosed structures,
			vessels, and vessel sections. 
			
			Multi-employer workplace—a
			workplace where there is a host employer and at least one contract
			employer. 
			
			Personal Alert Safety System (PASS)—a
			device that sounds a loud signal if the wearer becomes immobilized
			or is motionless for 30 seconds or more. 
			
			Physical isolation—the
			elimination of a fire hazard by removing the hazard from the work
			area (at least 35 feet for combustibles), by covering or shielding
			the hazard with a fire-resistant material, or physically
			preventing the hazard from entering the work area. 
			
			Physically isolated—positive
			isolation of the supply from the distribution piping of a fixed
			extinguishing system. Examples of ways to physically isolate
			include: removing a spool piece and installing a blank flange;
			providing a double block and bleed valve system; or completely
			disconnecting valves and piping from all cylinders or other
			pressure vessels containing extinguishing agents. 
			
			Protected space—any
			space into which a fixed extinguishing system can discharge. 
			
			Proximity firefighting—specialized
			fire-fighting operations that require specialized thermal
			protection and may include the activities of rescue, fire
			suppression, and property conservation at incidents involving
			fires producing very high levels of conductive, convective, and
			radiant heat such as aircraft fires, bulk flammable gas fires, and
			bulk flammable liquid fires. Proximity firefighting operations
			usually are exterior operations but may be combined with
			structural firefighting operations. Proximity firefighting is not
			entry firefighting. 
			
			Qualified instructor—a
			person with specific knowledge, training, and experience in fire
			response or fire watch activities to cover the material found in
			§1915.508(b) or (c). 
			
			Rescue—locating
			endangered persons at an emergency incident, removing those
			persons from danger, treating the injured, and transporting the
			injured to an appropriate health care facility. 
			
			Shipyard firefighting—the
			activity of rescue, fire suppression, and property conservation
			involving buildings, enclosed structures, vehicles, vessels,
			aircraft, or similar properties involved in a fire or emergency
			situation. 
			
			Small hose system—a
			system of hoses ranging in diameter from 5⁄8
			″
			(1.6 cm) up to 11⁄2
			″
			(3.8 cm) which is for the use of employees and which provides a
			means for the control and extinguishment of incipient stage fires. 
			
			Standpipe—a
			fixed fire protection system consisting of piping and hose
			connections used to supply water to approved hose lines or
			sprinkler systems. The hose may or may not be connected to the
			system. 
			
			 
 
			 
			
			Appendix A to Subpart P of Part
			1915—Model Fire Safety Plan (Non-Mandatory) 
			
			Model
			Fire Safety Plan 
			
			Note:
			This appendix is non-mandatory and provides guidance to assist
			employers in establishing a Fire Safety Plan as required in
			§1915.502. 
			
			Table
			of Contents 
			
			I. Purpose. 
			
			II. Work site fire hazards and how to
			properly control them. 
			
			III. Alarm systems and how to report
			fires. 
			
			IV. How to evacuate in different
			emergency situations. 
			
			V. Employee awareness. 
			
			I.
			Purpose 
			
			The purpose of this fire safety plan is
			to inform our employees of how we will control and reduce the
			possibility of fire in the workplace and to specify what equipment
			employees may use in case of fire. 
			
			II.
			Work Site Fire Hazards and How To Properly Control Them 
			
			A. Measures to contain fires. 
			
			B. Teaching selected employees how to
			use fire protection equipment. 
			
			C. What to do if you discover a fire. 
			
			D. Potential ignition sources for fires
			and how to control them. 
			
			E. Types of fire protection equipment
			and systems that can control a fire. 
			
			F. The level of firefighting capability
			present in the facility, vessel, or vessel section. 
			
			G. Description of the personnel
			responsible for maintaining equipment, alarms, and systems that
			are installed to prevent or control fire ignition sources, and to
			control fuel source hazards. 
			
			III.
			Alarm Systems and How To Report Fires 
			
			A. A demonstration of alarm procedures,
			if more than one type exists. 
			
			B. The work site emergency alarm system. 
			
			C. Procedures for reporting fires. 
			
			IV.
			How To Evacuate in Different Emergency Situations 
			
			A. Emergency escape procedures and route
			assignments. 
			
			B. Procedures to account for all
			employees after completing an emergency evacuation. 
			
			C. What type of evacuation is needed and
			what the employee's role is in carrying out the plan. 
			
			D. Helping physically impaired
			employees. 
			
			V.
			Employee Awareness 
			
			Names, job titles, or departments of
			individuals who can be contacted for further information about
			this plan. 
			
			 
			 
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