Note: | If you have provided employees with the advisory information required in the previous section, WAC 296-307-598, you do not need to provide the additional information in Table 2 to those employees. |
Note: | • Pay for medical evaluations, training, travel related costs, and wages. You do not need to pay for respirators employees use only voluntarily. |
• If you have both voluntary and required respirator users, you may choose to treat voluntary users as required users. Doing this exceeds the requirements in this section. |
Exemption: | If employees use only filtering-facepiece respirators and do so only voluntarily, you do not need to develop and maintain a written program. |
Advisory Information for Employees Who Voluntarily Use Respirators | |||
• Respirators protect against airborne hazards when properly selected and used. WISHA recommends voluntary use of respirators when exposure to substances is below WISHA permissible exposure limits (PELs) because respirators can provide you an additional level of comfort and protection. | |||
• If you choose to voluntarily use a respirator (whether it is provided by you or your employer) be aware that respirators can create hazards for you, the user. You can avoid these hazards if you know how to use your respirator properly and how to keep it clean. Take these steps: | |||
– Read and follow all instructions provided by the manufacturer about use, maintenance (cleaning and care), and warnings regarding the respirator's limitations. | |||
– Choose respirators that have been certified for use to protect against the substance of concern. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) certifies respirators. If a respirator is not certified by NIOSH, you have no guarantee that it meets minimum design and performance standards for workplace use. | |||
■ A NIOSH approval label will appear on or in the respirator packaging. It will tell you what protection the respirator provides. | |||
– Keep track of your respirator so you do not mistakenly use someone else's. | |||
– do not wear your respirator into: | |||
■ Atmospheres containing hazards that your respirator is not designed to protect against. | |||
For example, a respirator designed to filter dust particles will not protect you against solvent vapor, smoke or oxygen deficiency. | |||
■ Situations where respirator use is required. |