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Taken from The Safety Zone, website of the North Carolina Department of
Transportation.
Did
you know there was an OSHA standard pertaining to Housekeeping on Construction
Sites (29CFR Part 1926 25)? This three paragraph standard doesn't say
a lot, but what it does say is important to worker safety and health.
So much so that, the NCDOT has adopted a Safety Policy & Procedure
(SPP#1926.25) for complying with this standard.
Construction sites can present many hazards to employees when they are
performing construction-related activities. Keeping a construction site
relatively clean of debris can further reduce hazards. The benefits of
good housekeeping far exceeds the small additional effort
required to establish good housekeeping practices at a construction site.
NCDOT employees on
construction sites are required to practice good housekeeping to further
reduce hazards on these sites. When construction hazards exist that cannot
be eliminated, then engineering practices, administrative controls, safe
work practices, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), and/or proper training
will be implemented.
For purposes of this
OSHA standard, the following definitions apply:
- Debris:
Unusable or unwanted construction waste material.
- Form Lumber:
Lumber that is used to contain liquid concrete into defined shaped until
the concrete hardens.
- Hazardous Wastes:
Waste that is either toxic to humans or to the environment.
Scrap
material and debris generated during construction usually consist of Noncombustible
scrap material and debris and Combustible scrap materials and debris.
Noncombustible scrap material and debris that consist of form and scrap
lumber with protruding nails, and all other debris, must be kept cleared
from work areas, passageways, and stairs, and from around buildings or
other structures.
Combustible scrap
materials and debris must be removed at regular intervals during the course
of construction without increasing the hazard exposure to employees who
remove such debris. Nails should be removed from used lumber before stacking.
All
construction waste must first be collected into containers before disposal.
These wastes include General Waste and Trash (nontoxic, non-hazardous)
and Hazardous Wastes. Separate containers must be provided for the collection
and separation of waste, trash and other refuse.
Additional separate
containers must be provided with lids for hazardous wastes to prevent
sparks or other ignition sources from coming into contact with hazardous
wastes. Hazardous Wastes can include used oil, used oil filters, oily
rags and flammable wastes as well as caustics, acids, harmful dusts, etc.
Here
is a simple checklist for Housekeeping on Construction Sites:
| Construction
Site: |
|
| Location: |
|
| Division/Unit: |
|
| Date: |
|
| Yes |
No |
|
 |
 |
Are
protruding nails, form, scrap lumber, and other debris kept clear
from work areas, passageways, and stairs, in and around buildings
or other structures? |
 |
 |
Are
combustible scrap and debris being removed at regular intervals during
the course of construction? |
 |
 |
Are
containers being provided for the collection and separation of waste
and trash? |
 |
 |
Do
the containers for the hazardous wastes (oily rags and flammables)
have lids? |
___________________________________________
Employees should report any hazards on the construction site to their
supervisor. Hazardous wastes must be managed through your division's Hazardous
Materials Manager.
Contributions
Wanted!
The Safety Zone
is dedicated to providing a commercial-free web site that acts as a resource
of information pertaining to employee safety and health. Although sponsored
by the NC Department of Transportation and focused on Transportation Safety,
other safety and health related topics are included from time to time.
An Archive of articles, Safety Alerts and Bulletins are maintained for
use by anyone in their efforts toward promoting employee safety and health.
To that end, we would
like to offer you the opportunity to contribute your favorite safety and
health related articles, bulletins, etc for inclusion in The Safety
Zone. To be accepted, they must be your original work and not
copywrited or otherwise prohibited from publication in this newsletter.
Please read our DISCLAIMER below.
We want to give you
an opportunity to share your safety and health information with others.
That is why this space is being reserved for you. Have an Idea?
Send it to the editor below:
Herbert Oxendine,
CSP
Safety Engineer, NCDOT Div. 14
P. O. Box 37
Sylva, NC 28779
Courier: 08-23-15
email: hoxendine@dot.state.nc.us
DISCLAIMER:
The information contained within this website (http://www.doh.dot.state.nc.us/safety/workzone/)
has been developed or obtained from sources believed to be reliable, however,
no guarantee as to the accuracy or correctness of this information is
made or implied by the editor, contributors, or the North Carolina Department
of Transportation.
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