Note: | PPE includes: |
| • Protective equipment for eyes, face, head, hearing, and extremities; |
| • Protective clothing; |
| • Respiratory devices; |
| and |
| • Protective shields and barriers. |
(b) You must maintain PPE in a sanitary and reliable condition.
Reference: | For requirements on maintaining specific personal protective equipment (PPE), see the following rules. |
| • Chapter 296-842 WAC, Respirators; |
| and |
| • Chapter 296-817 WAC, Hearing loss prevention. |
(c) If employees provide their own protective equipment, then you are responsible to make sure the PPE is:
• Adequate;
• Properly maintained;
and
• Sanitary.
(d) All personal protective equipment must be of safe design and construction for the work to be performed.
(2) Minimum clothing requirements.
(a) You must ensure that employees wear at least:
• A short-sleeved shirt;
• Long pants;
and
• Shoes that meet the requirements of WAC
296-155-212, Foot protection.
Definition:
A short-sleeved shirt covers the top of the shoulder and has material extending down the arm. If a short-sleeved shirt has a seam at the end of the shoulder, the material must extend down the arm from the seam.
Long pants have legs that extend past the knee when the wearer stands and leaves no exposed skin on the lower leg.
(b) Where there is a danger of contact with moving parts of machinery, or the work process is such that a hazard exists:
• The clothing of employees must fit closely about the body.
• Dangling neck wear, bracelets, wristwatches, rings, or similar articles must not be worn by employees.
Note: | For additional related requirements see WAC 296-155-205, Head protection. |
(3) You must require employees to wear appropriate PPE in all operations where:
• There is an exposure to hazardous conditions;
or
• WAC 296-155-200, General requirements for personal protective equipment (PPE), indicates a need for using such equipment to reduce the hazards to the employees.
(4) Employees must comply with job safety practices and procedures and PPE requirements that are relevant to the job site.
(5) High visibility garments.
(a) During daylight hours, when employees' duties are performed in close proximity to moving vehicles, you must make sure that employees wear a high-visibility safety vest, shirt, or jacket that is fluorescent yellow-green, fluorescent orange-red, or fluorescent red in color. This garment must always be worn as an outer garment.
Definition:
For the purpose of this rule, hours of darkness means from one-half hour before sunset to one-half hour after sunrise.
(b) During hours of darkness, when employees' duties are performed in close proximity to moving vehicles, you must make sure that employees wear, at a minimum, a high-visibility safety vest, shirt, or jacket:
• Designed according to ANSI/ISEA 107-1999 Class 2 specifications;
• Worn as an outer garment;
and
• Worn to provide 360 degrees of visibility around the employee.
Note: | A high-visibility garment meets Class 2 specifications if the garment: |
| • Has an ANSI "Class 2" label; |
| or |
| • Has at least 775 square inches of background material and 201 square inches of retroflective material that encircles the torso and is placed to provide 360 degrees of visibility around the employee. |
Note: | • Fading and soiling may degrade the high-visibility characteristics of the garments. |
| • ANSI/ISEA 107-1999 is available by: |
| – Purchasing copies of ANSI/ISEA 107-1999 by writing: |
| – American National Standards Institute |
| 11 West 42nd Street |
| New York, NY 10036 |
| or |
| – Contacting the ANSI website at http://web.ansi.org/. |
| or |
| • Reading a copy of ANSI/ISEA 107-1999 at any Washington state library. |
(6) Payment for PPE. Except as provided in (a) through (e) of this subsection, the protective equipment, including PPE, used to comply with this chapter must be provided by the employer at no cost to employees.
(a) You are not required to pay for nonspecialty safety-toe protective footwear (including steel-toe shoes or steel-toe boots) and nonspecialty prescription safety eyewear, provided that the employer permits such items to be worn off the job site.
(b) When you provide metatarsal guards and allow the employee, at their request, to use shoes or boots with built-in metatarsal protection, you are not required to reimburse the employee for the shoes or boots.
(c) You are not required to pay for:
• Everyday clothing, such as long-sleeve shirts, long pants, street shoes, and normal work boots;
• Ordinary clothing, skin creams, or other items used solely for protection from weather, such as winter coats, jackets, gloves, parkas, rubber boots, hats, raincoats, ordinary sunglasses, and sunscreen.
(d) The employer must pay for replacement PPE, except when the employee has lost or intentionally damaged the PPE.
(e) Where an employee provides adequate protective equipment they own to meet the requirements of this chapter, you may allow the employee to use it and is not required to reimburse the employee for that equipment. You must not require an employee to provide or pay for their own PPE, unless the PPE is excepted in (a) through (d) of this subsection.
[Statutory Authority: RCW
49.17.010,
49.17.040,
49.17.050,
49.17.060. WSR 16-09-085, § 296-155-200, filed 4/19/16, effective 5/20/16; WSR 09-05-071, § 296-155-200, filed 2/17/09, effective 4/1/09; WSR 04-24-089, § 296-155-200, filed 12/1/04, effective 1/1/05. Statutory Authority: RCW
49.17.010, [49.17].040, and [49.17].050. WSR 01-11-038, § 296-155-200, filed 5/9/01, effective 9/1/01. Statutory Authority: Chapter
49.17 RCW. WSR 94-15-096 (Order 94-07), § 296-155-200, filed 7/20/94, effective 9/20/94. Statutory Authority: RCW
49.17.040 and
49.17.050. WSR 86-03-074 (Order 86-14), § 296-155-200, filed 1/21/86; Order 76-29, § 296-155-200, filed 9/30/76; Order 74-26, § 296-155-200, filed 5/7/74, effective 6/6/74.]