August 19, 1991
Mr. LeRoy S. Harris
Director, Damage Assessment Projects
MR-Ferguson Company
MR-Ferguson Plaza
1500 West 3rd Street
Cleveland, OH 44113-1406
Dear Mr. Harris:
This is in response to your inquiry of June
17, concerning the Occupational Safety
and
Health Administration's (OSHA) Hazardous
Waste Operations and Emergency Response
final
rule (29 CFR 1910.120).
Your specific question relates to training
and certification for employees who
are "graduate
chemical engineers and mechanical engineers
having P.E. licenses and have design/build
chemical or petrochemical plant experience."
Specifically, you want to know if these
employees
can be considered "equivalently
trained."
Under 1910.120(e)(9), "academic
training
or the training that existing employees
might
have already received from actual hazardous
waste site work experience" is
acceptable
as equivalent training. However, the
employer
must ensure that the employee attends
a course,
or combination of courses, or previous
work
experience, that meet all of the training
objectives as listed below and in 1910.120(e)(2).
Employees with academic training may
be familiar
with engineering controls, but may
not be
aware of safety and health issues.
Employees working on site who are exposed
to hazardous substances or health and
safety
hazards are to be trained to meet objectives
under section (e)(2):
-
Names of personnel and alternates responsible
for site safety and health;
-
Safety, health and other hazards present
on the site;
-
Use of personal protective equipment;
-
Work practices by which the employee can
minimize risks from hazards;
-
Safe use of engineering controls and equipment
on the site;
-
Medical surveillance requirements, including
recognition of symptoms and signs which might
indicate overexposure to hazards; and
-
The contents of paragraphs 1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(G)
through 1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(J) of the safety
and health plan set forth in paragraph 1910.120(b)(4)(ii).
-
1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(G) covers decontamination
procedures;
-
1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(H) covers the site's emergency
response plan, including the necessary PPE
and other equipment;
-
1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(I) covers confined space
entry procedures; and
-
1910.120(b)(4)(ii)(J) covers the site's spill
containment program.
Additionally, employees who fall under
1910.120(e)
must receive 8 hours of refresher training
annually, regardless of their previous
experience
or education.
The employer must retain a written
document
which clearly identifies the employee,
the
person certifying the employee as equivalently
trained, the certifier's qualifications,
and the training and/or past experience
which
meets the training requirements. One
possibility
would be to include this information
in the
employee's personnel file. The preferred
method is to include this information
on
a separate certificate for each employee.
OSHA does not certify individuals,
it is
the employer who must show by documentation
or certification that an employee's
work
experience and/or training meets the
requirements
of 1910.120. OSHA is working on a new regulation concerning
certification of HAZWOPER training programs
(1910.121), which will be promulgated in
the future. Currently, this new rule is in
rule making. Your organization may want to
monitor the progress of this new standard
and anticipate needed changes in your training
and certification programs to insure continued
compliance by your training division.
We hope this information is helpful.
If you have any further questions please
feel free to contact [the Office of Health
Enforcement at (202) 693-2190].
Sincerely,
Patricia K. Clark, Director
[Directorate of Enforcement Programs]
|