Title: Fire Protection in Shipyard Employment
1Fire Protection in Shipyard Employment
2General provisions
- Purpose and Scope 501
- Fire safety plan 502
- Precautions before hot work 503
- Fire watches 504
- Fire response 505
- Hazards of fixed extinguishers on board vessel
506 - Landside fire protection system 507
- Training 508
3Purpose
- Requires employers to protect all employees from
fire hazards in shipyard employment, including
employees engaged in fire response activities - Provides increased protection for shipyard
employment workers from the hazards of fire on
vessels and vessel sections and at land-side
facilities - Reflects new technologies and national NFPA
consensus standards
4Scope
- Covers employers with employees engaged in
- Shipyard employment aboard vessels and vessel
sections - Land - side operations
- Regardless of geographic locations
5Employee participation
- Employers must provide for employees or employee
representatives to participate in developing and
reviewing programs and policies to comply with
this subpart
6Multi-employer worksites
- Host employer responsibilities
- Inform employers about the content of the fire
safety plan including hazards, controls, fire
safety and health rules, and emergency procedures - Ensure safety and health responsibilities for
fire protection are assigned as appropriate to
other employers at the worksite
7Multi-employer worksites (contd)
- Contract employer responsibilities
- Ensure 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 - Advise the host employer of any previously
unidentified fire- related hazards that the
contract employer identifies at the worksite
8Fire safety plan29 CFR 1950-502
- Employer responsibilities
- Plan elements
- Reviewing the plan with employees
- Additional employer requirements
- Contract employers
9Plan elements
- Plan must include
- Identification of significant fire hazards
- Procedures for recognizing and reporting unsafe
conditions - Alarm procedures
- Procedures for notifying employees of a fire
emergency - Procedures for notifying fire response
organizations of a fire emergency - Procedures for evacuation
- Procedures to account for all employees after an
evacuation and - Names, job titles, or departments or individuals
who can be contacted for information about the
plan
10Reviewing the plan with employees
- The employer must review the plan with each
employee at the following times - By March 14, 2004, for current employees
- Upon initial assignment for new employees and
- When the actions the employee must take under the
plan change because of a change in duties or a
change in the plan.
11Additional plan requirements
- Must be accessible to employees, employee
representatives and OSHA - Review and update at least annually
- Document affected employees have been informed
about the plan - Give a copy to outside fire response
organizations that will respond to fires
12Contract employers
- Contract employers in shipyard employment must
have a fire safety plan for their employees, and
the plan must comply with the host employer's
fire safety plan - The contract employer can adopt the host
employers fire safety plan to meet this
requirement
13Precautions for hot work29 CFR 1915 503
- General requirements
- Designated areas
- Non-designated areas
- Specific requirements
- Maintaining fire hazard free conditions
- Fuel gas and oxygen supply line and torches
14General requirements - designated areas
- The employer may designate areas that are free of
fire hazardsfor hot work in sites such as - Vessels
- Vessel sections
- Fabricating shops
- Subassembly areas
15Non-designated areas
- Visually inspect area where hot work will be
performed, including adjacent areas unless Marine
Chemists certificate or Shipyard Competent
persons logs is used for authorization - Perform hot work only in areas that are free of
fire hazards, or controlled by physical
isolation, fire watches, etc. - Maintain fire hazard-free conditions
16Precautions for hot work specific requirements
- Fuel gas and oxygen supply lines and torches
- No unattended lines in confined spaces
- No unattended charged lines in enclosed spaces
for more than 15 minutes - Fuel gas and oxygen hose lines disconnected at
end of each shift
17Precautions for hot work specific requirements
(contd)
- Roll lines back to supply manifold or open air
and then disconnect torch, or - Disconnect extended fuel gas and oxygen hose
lines at the the supply manifold - Only if the lines are given a positive means of
identification - Use a drop test or other positive means to ensure
the integrity of fuel gas and oxygen burning
system before resuming hot work
18Fire watches29 CFR 1915 - 504
- Written policy
- Posting fire watches
- Assigning employees to fire watch duty
19Written policy
- Detailed fire watch training
- Identifies duties employees will perform and
equipment they will be given - Includes personal protective equipment (PPE) that
must be made available and worn
20Posting fire watches
- Must post a fire watch during hot work if any of
the following are present - Slag, weld splatter, or sparks might pass through
an opening and cause a fire - Fire-resistant guards or curtains are not used to
prevent ignition of combustible materials on or
near decks, bulkheads, etc - Combustible material is closer than 35 ft. and
cannot be removed, shielded or protected
21Posting fire watches (contd)
- Hot work is carried out on or near insulation,
combustible coatings that cannot be shielded, cut
back, removed, or inerted - Combustible materials adjacent to the opposite
sides of bulkheads, decks, etc. may be ignited by
conduction or radiation - The hot work is close enough to cause ignition
through heat radiation or conduction on - Insulated pipes, bulkheads, decks, partitions, or
overheads or - Combustible materials and/or coatings
22Posting fire watches (contd)
- The work is close enough to unprotected
combustible pipe or cable runs to cause ignition - A Marine Chemist, a Coast Guard-authorized
person, or a shipyard Competent Person requires
that a fire watch be posted
23Assigning employees to fire watch duty
- Employees must not be assigned additional duties
while the hot work is in progress - Employees must be physically capable of
performing fire watch duties - Employees assigned to fire watch duty must
- Have a clear view and immediate access to all
areas included in the fire watch - Be able to communicate with workers exposed to
hot work - Be authorized to stop work and restore safe
conditions within hot work area
24Assigning employees to fire watch duty (contd)
- Remain in the hot work area for 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 - Be trained to detect fires in areas exposed to
the hot work - Extinguish incipient stage fires in the hot work
area - Alert employees of any fire beyond the incipient
stage and - If unable to extinguish fire, activate the alarm
25Fire response29 CFR 1915 505
- Employer responsibilities
- Written policy information
- Internal response
- External response
- Medical requirements for shipyard response
employees - Organization of internal fire response functions
- Personal protective clothing and equipment for
fire response employees - Equipment maintenance (PPE)
26Employer responsibilities
- Decide what type of response will be provided and
who will provide it - Internal fire response
- Outside fire response
- Create, maintain, and update a written policy
that - Describes the internal and outside fire response
organizations that the employer will use and - Defines evacuation procedures, if the employer
chooses to require a total or partial evacuation
of the worksite at the time of a fire
27Written policy internal response
- The basic structure of the fire response
organization - Number of trained fire response employees
- The fire response functions that will be carried
out - Minimum number of fire response employees
necessary - Type, amount, and frequency of training that must
be given to fire response employees - Procedures for using protective clothing and
equipment
28Written policy outside response
- Types of fire suppression incidents to which the
fire response organization is expected to respond
at the employer's facility - Liaisons between the employer and the outside
fire response organizations
29Written policy outside response (contd)
- A plan for fire response functions that
- Addresses procedures for obtaining assistance
from the outside fire response organization - Familiarizes the outside fire response
organization with the layout of the employer's
facility or worksite - Sets forth how hose and coupling connections will
be made compatible and location of adapter
couplings - States employer will not allow use of
incompatible hose connections
30Written policy combination of internal and
outside response
- The basic organizational structure of the
combined fire response - Number of combined trained fire responders
- Fire response functions that may need to be
carried out - Minimum number of fire response employees
necessary - Number and types of apparatuses, and
- Description of the fire suppression operations
established by written standard operating
procedures for each particular type of response
at the worksite - Type, amount, and frequency of joint training
with outside fire response organizations
31Employee evacuation
- Emergency escape procedures
- Procedures to be followed by employees who remain
at worksite to perform critical operations during
the evacuation - Procedures to account for all employees after
emergency evacuation is completed - Means of reporting fires and other emergencies
- Names or job titles of employees or departments
to be contacted for further information or
explanation of duties
32Written emergency response
- The employer must include the following
information in the employer's written policy - A description of the emergency rescue procedures
and - Names or job titles of the employees who are
assigned to perform them
33Medical requirements for shipyard fire response
employees
- The employer must ensure that
- Fire response employees receive medical exams to
assure they are physically and medically fit for
duties expected to perform - Fire response employees, required to wear
respirators meet the medical requirements - Each fire response employee has an annual medical
examination and - Medical records are kept on fire response
employees
34Organization of internal fire response functions
- Organize fire response functions to ensure
adequate resources for emergency operations - Establish lines of authority and assign
responsibilities to ensure components of the
internal fire response are accomplished - Set up incident management system to coordinate
and direct fire response functions, including - Specific fire emergency responsibilities
- Accountability for all fire response employees
participating in an emergency operation and - Resources offered by outside organizations
- Provide information as required to the outside
fire response organization to be used
35PPE for fire response employees
- General requirements
- Thermal stability and flame resistance
- Respiratory protection
- Interior structural firefighting operations
- Proximity firefighting operations
- Personal alert safety system (PASS) devices
- Life safety ropes, body harnesses and hardware
36General requirements
- Employer must
- At no cost, supply all fire response employees
appropriate personal protective clothing and
equipment they need to perform expected duties - Ensure employees wear the appropriate PPE and
use the equipment, when necessary, to protect
them from hazardous exposures
37Thermal stability and flame resistance
- Ensure each fire response employee exposed to
flame hazards do not wear clothing that could
increase the extent of injury - Prohibit wearing clothing made from acetate,
nylon, or polyester, either alone or in blends,
unless it can be shown that - The fabric will withstand the flammability hazard
that may be encountered or - The clothing will be worn in such a way to
eliminate the flammability hazard that may be
encountered
38Personal Alert Safety System (PASS) devices
- Provide each fire response employee involved in
firefighting operations with a PASS device and - Ensure that each PASS device meets the
recommendations in NFPA 1982-1998 Standard on
Personal Alert Safety Systems (PASS)
39Life safety ropes, body harnesses and hardware
- The employer must ensure that
- All life safety ropes, body harnesses, and
hardware used by fire response employees for
emergency operations meet the applicable
recommendations in NFPA 1983-2001 - Fire response employees use only Class I body
harnesses to attach to ladders and aerial
devices and - Fire response employees use only Class II and
Class III body harnesses for fall arrest and
rappelling operations
40Equipment maintenance
- Personal protective equipment
- Employer must inspect and maintain PPE used to
protect fire response employees to ensure that it
provides the intended protection - Fire response equipment.
- Keep fire response equipment in a state of
readiness - Standardize all fire hose coupling and connection
threads throughout the facility - Ensure all fire hoses and coupling connection
threads are the same throughout the facility 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
41Hazards of fixed extinguishing systems on board
vessels and vessel sections 29 CFR 1915 - 506
- Employer responsibilities
- Requirements for automatic and manual systems
- Sea and dock trials
- Doors and hatches
- Testing the system
- Conducting system maintenance
- Using fixed manual extinguishing systems for
protection
42Employers 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
43Requirements for automatic and manual systems
- Before working in a a space with a fixed system,
either - Physically isolate the systems or use other
positive means to prevent the systems' discharge
- or
- Ensure employees are trained to recognize
- Systems' discharge and evacuation alarms and the
appropriate escape routes and - Hazards associated with the extinguishing systems
and agents including the dangers of disturbing
system components and equipment
44Sea and dock trials and door hatches
- During trials, the employer must ensure that all
systems remain operational - Take protective measures to ensure all doors,
hatches, scuttles, and other exit openings remain
working and accessible for escape in the event
the systems are activated and
45Sea and dock trials and door hatches (contd)
- Ensure that all inward opening doors, hatches,
scuttles, and other potential barriers to safe
exit are removed or blocked open, if systems'
activation could result in a positive pressure in
the protected spaces sufficient to impede escape
46Testing the system
- When testing a fixed extinguishing system
involves a total discharge of extinguishing
medium into a space, employer must - Evacuate all employees from space and assure no
employees remain in the space during the
discharge - Retest the atmosphere to ensure that the oxygen
levels are safe for employees to enter - When testing a fixed extinguishing system does
not involve a total discharge of the systems
extinguishing medium, employer must - Ensure system's extinguishing medium is isolated
- All employees not directly involved in the
testing are evacuated from the protected space
47Conducting system maintenance
- Before conducting maintenance on a fixed
extinguishing system, the employer must ensure
that the system is physically isolated
48Using 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 - Only authorized employees are allowed to activate
the system - Authorized employees are trained to operate and
activate the systems and - All employees are evacuated from the protected
spaces, and accounted for, before the fixed
manual extinguishing system is activated
49Land-side fire protection systems 29 CFR 1915 -
507
- Employer responsibilities
- Portable fire extinguishers and hose systems
- Fixed extinguishing systems
50Employer responsibilities
- Ensure all fixed and portable fire protection
systems needed to meet OSHA standard for employee
safety or employee protection from fire hazards
in land- side facilities meet the requirements,
including, but not limited to - Buildings
- Structures
- Equipment
51Portable fire extinguishers and hose systems
- Employer must select, install, inspect, maintain,
and test all portable fire extinguishers
according to NFPA 10-1998 Standard for Portable
Fire Extinguishers - Class II or Class III hose systems permitted as
fire extinguishers if the employer selects,
installs, inspects, maintains, and tests those
systems according to the specific recommendations
in NFPA 14-2000 Standard for the Installation of
Standpipe, Private Hydrant, and Hose Systems
52General requirements for fixed extinguishing
systems
- Ensure any fixed extinguishing system component
or extinguishing agent is approved by an OSHA
Nationally Recognized Testing Laboratory - Notify employees and take 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 - Ensure repairs to fire extinguishing systems and
equipment are done by a qualified technician - Provide and ensure employees use PPE when
entering discharge areas in which the atmosphere
remains hazardous to employee safety or health
53General requirements for fixed extinguishing
systems (contd)
- Post hazard warning or caution signs at 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 - Select, install, inspect, maintain, and test all
automatic fire detection systems and emergency
alarms according to NFPA 72-1999
54Fixed extinguishing systems
- Standpipe and hose systems IAW NFPA 14 -2000
- Automatic sprinkler systems IAW NFPA 25-2002, and
either NFPA 13 1999, or NFPA 750 2000 - Fixed extinguishing systems that use water or
foam agent IAW NFPA 15-2001 - Fixed extinguishing systems using dry chemical
IAW NFPA 17-2002 - Fixed extinguishing systems using gas IAW NFPA
12-2000
55Training 29 CFR 1915 - 508
- Training
- All - employee training
- Additional training requirements for employees
expected to fight incipient stage fires - Additional training requirements for shipyard
employees designated for fire response - Additional training requirements for fire watch
duty - Records
56Training
- Current employees by 03/15/2005
- New employees upon initial assignment
- When necessary to maintain proficiency for
employee previously trained
57Employee training (contd)
- Employer must train all employees on
- Emergency alarm signals, including system
discharge alarms and employee evacuation alarms - The primary and secondary evacuation routes that
employees must use in the event of a fire in the
workplace
58Training for employees expected to fight
incipient stage fires
- Principles of using fire extinguishers or hose
lines - Hazards involved with incipient firefighting, and
the procedures used to reduce these hazards - Hazards associated with fixed and portable fire
protection systems - Activation and operation of fixed and portable
fire protection systems that the employer expects
employees to use in the workplace
59Requirements for shipyard employees designated
for fire response
- Have a written plan stating fire response
employees are trained and capable of carrying out
their duties - Update plan to address anticipated emergencies
- Review training programs and hands-on sessions
before their use in training and ensure employees
are protected from hazards associated with
response training - Provide training that ensures employees are
capable of carrying out their duties - Train new employees before they engage in
emergency operations
60Requirements for shipyard employees designated
for fire response (contd)
- At least quarterly, provide training on written
operating procedures - Use qualified instructors to conduct the training
- Conduct training that involves live fire response
exercises IAW NFPA 1403-2002 - Conduct semi-annual drills according to
employers written procedures - Prohibit use of smoke generating devices in
training exercises
61Additional training for fire watch duty
- The employer must ensure that each fire watch is
trained by an instructor with adequate fire watch
knowledge and experience - Before being assigned as a fire watch
- Whenever there is a change in operations that
presents a new or different hazard - Whenever employer believes fire watchs skills
are inadequate - Annually
62Additional training for fire watch duty (contd)
- Basics of fire behavior
- Different classes of extinguishing agents
- Stages of a fire
- Methods for extinguishing fires
- Adverse health effects caused by fire
- Physical characteristics of hot work area
- Extinguishing live fire scenarios
- Unless prohibited by local and federal law
- Extension to July 1, 2005
63Additional training for fire watch duty (contd)
- Hazards associated with fire watch duties
- PPE and its use
- Selection and use of extinguishers and hoses
- Location and use of barriers
- Means of communication
- When and how to start fire alarm procedures
- Employers evacuation plan
- Vessel sections
- Land-side
64Additional training for fire watch duty (contd)
- Alert others to exit the space when
- The fire watch perceives an unsafe condition
- Fire watch perceives a worker is in danger
- Employer or employers representative orders an
evacuation - An evacuation signal is activated
65Records
- Training records must include
- Employees name
- Trainers name
- Type of training
- Dates training took place
- Records must be maintained for one year, or until
replaced by new record, whichever is shorter
66For More Help
- Contact your local OSHA office
- OSHA Web site (www.osha.gov)
- Maritime Page http//www.osha.gov/dts/maritime/ind
ex.html - 1-800-321-OSHA