Osha Roof Fall Protection General Industry
Except as otherwise provided in paragraph b of this section each employee engaged in roofing activities on low slope roofs with unprotected sides and edges 6 feet 1 8 m or more above lower levels shall be protected from falling by guardrail systems safety net systems personal fall arrest systems or a combination of warning line system and guardrail system warning line system and safety net system or warning line system and personal fall arrest system or warning line system and.
Osha roof fall protection general industry. Supervise workers to ensure fall protection equipment is used and maintained correctly. Osha requires that fall protection be provided at elevations of four feet in general industry workplaces five feet in shipyards six feet in the construction industry and eight feet in longshoring operations. The new rule redefines safe distances from the roof edge and the degree of protection required within specified footage. Note to paragraph g.
Osha defines fall protection as any equipment device or system that prevents a worker from falling from an elevation or mitigates the effect of such a fall under the final rule employers may choose from the following fall protection options. Two osha standards can apply 29 cfr 1910 which governs general industry safety standards and 29 cfr 1926 which governs construction sites specifically. Osha safety standards especially for roof fall protection can be a source of confusion for many industrial companies. This section highlights osha standards federal register notices rules and proposed rules preambles to final rules background to final rules directives instruction to osha staff letters of interpretation official letters of interpretation of the standards and national consensus standards.
Figure d 14 clearances for fixed ladders in wells. Osha s fall protection standards at 29 cfr 1926 subpart m to protect workers exposed to falls six feet or more above a lower level. Implement safe work practices to reduce the possibility of falls. The osha general industry standards exclude construction as well as agriculture and marine industries which also have their own standards but both standards can sometimes apply to the same.
Figure d 15 example of general construction of cages. Section 1910 28 establishes the requirements that employers must follow on the use of cages and wells as a means of fall protection. Fall protection for activities not in the construction industry is addressed in specific standards for the general industry shipyard employment marine terminals and longshoring industry.