Working with Lead on Bridges

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Hunter College - Urban Public Health Program

Summary Statement

A guide for construction workers, and contractors who work on bridge rehabilitation jobs, describing lead controls and contractor responsibilities to provide a safe working environment.
1998


TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION

LEAD EXPOSURE ON BRIDGES

LEAD HEALTH EFFECTS

OSHA LEAD STANDARD

CHECKLIST: EMPLOYER DUTIES
EXPOSURE ASSESSMENT
ENGINEERING & WORK PRACTICE CONTROLS
INTERIM CONTROLS
PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT & HYGIENE FACILITIES

RESPIRATORS

FIT TESTING

MEDICAL SURVEILLANCE

CHECKLIST: WORKER RESPONSIBILITIES

The Construction Hygiene and Ergonomics Program provides programs in worker protection and regulatory compliance for companies, agencies and unions involved with rehabilitation, repair, and modification of steel structures and buildings coated with lead-based paint. It offers full medical surveillance and blood lead testing; exposure assessment and air monitoring; and training services. In cooperation with the Hunter College Industrial Hygiene Program, Mount Sinai also researches workplace exposures and evaluates state-of-the-art engineering and work practice controls on construction sites.

INTRODUCTION

"Working with Lead on Bridges" is a publication of the Mount Sinai-Irving J. Selikoff Construction Hygiene and Ergonomics Program (formerly Lead in Construction Program). It is a guide for ironworkers, laborers, painters, other construction workers, and contractors who work on bridge rehabilitation jobs. It describes contractor responsibilities to provide a safe working environment and to implement lead controls. Contractors should have a copy of the OSHA standard, 29 CFR 1926.62, Lead Exposure in Construction, on hand for a more detailed description. This guide also reminds workers of their responsibilities to comply with company safety programs and to participate in lead control programs.

Lead is a poisonous metal. It has been used in paint for hundreds of years. Since lead-based paint inhibits rusting and corrosion on iron and steel, it has been used on bridges and other steel structures. It is estimated that more than 90,000 bridges - many in need of repairs - in the United States are coated with lead paint. Lead dust and fumes are released into the air whenever lead paint is disturbed during maintenance, reconstruction, and demolition of bridges and other steel structures.

Lead was banned from residential paints in 1978 by the federal government, but it is still allowed in industrial, marine, and bridge paint. Fortunately, many owners no longer use lead paint on bridges and other structures.

LEAD EXPOSURE ON BRIDGES

Ironworkers, painters, laborers, and other construction workers may be exposed to lead during repair of bridges and steel structures. Workers need protection whenever they disturb or remove lead paint - when torch cutting, grinding, scaling, needle gunning, rivet busting, and cleaning-up. Workers are exposed by breathing in tiny airborne particles or by hand to mouth activities, like smoking or eating. Lead disturbing activities include:
  • torch cutting, burning
  • welding
  • abrasive blasting
  • grinding
  • piston scaling
  • rivet busting
  • needle gunning
  • scraping
  • chemical stripping
  • sweeping, cleaning up

Workers, and others nearby, are exposed when they perform these tasks. Burning is especially hazardous because lead boils at about 3000°F. An oxyacetylene torch, which burns between 5400° and 6400°F, easily vaporizes all of the lead it contacts forming tiny fume particles. The smaller the lead particle, the easier it makes its way to the lungs and to the bloodstream.

LEAD HEALTH EFFECTS

You get lead into your body by breathing it in or by swallowing it. Lead particles do not go through the skin, but if lead dust is on your hands it can be accidentally swallowed while eating, drinking, or smoking.

Lead is hazardous when it gets into the bloodstream where it can move around the body. High exposures over a short period of time or lower exposures spread out over longer time periods can cause lead poisoning. Lead can damage the brain and nervous system, kidneys, and reproductive systems. Lead also contributes to high blood pressure. Most of the absorbed lead is eventually stored in the bones where it may stay for decades. Under certain conditions, the lead stored in the bone may leach slowly into the bloodstream.

The early effects of lead poisoning are not specific and resemble the symptoms of a flu. Short term and long term effects of lead overexposure are listed below.

Lead poisoning is preventable. Many of the health problems caused by lead exposure are reversible if exposure is eliminated or reduced.

SHORT TERM EFFECTS

  • stomach cramps
  • poor appetite
  • irritability/anxiety
  • fatigue
  • muscle or joint pain
  • weakness
  • headache
  • numbness
  • constipation
  • sleep problems
  • impotence
  • loss of sex drive

LONG TERM EFFECTS

  • high blood pressure
  • nerve disorders
  • brain damage
  • kidney damage
  • reproductive damage
  • birth defects

FAMILY EXPOSURES

Construction workers can expose their families to lead by bringing home lead dust on their work clothes, tools, and skin. It is very important to leave all contaminated articles at the job and to shower or wash up before going home. Children and pregnant women are especially at risk. Lead poisoning in children can cause brain damage, mental deficits, behavior problems, and growth retardation.

OSHA LEAD STANDARD

OSHA issued the Lead Exposure in Construction; Interim Final Rule in May, 1993, and set the permissible exposure limit (PEL) at 50 micrograms of lead per cubic meter of air (50 mcg/m 3 ) averaged over an 8-hour day. OSHA requires employers to reduce exposure to lead below the PEL with engineering controls, work practices and respirators. The standard also sets an action level (AL) of 30 mcg/m 3 . Contractors must provide blood testing, training and air monitoring if workers are exposed at or above the action level.

OSHA inspectors visit construction sites when the agency believes that workers may be overexposed. They routinely investigate bridge rehabilitation sites where lead paint is being disturbed. The agency may be notified about lead hazards by local health departments or workers at the site.

CHECKLIST: EMPLOYER DUTIES
Check Mark
Implement written compliance program describing roles and responsibilities, competent person, engineering and work practice controls, recordkeeping  
Provide air monitoring, notify workers of results  
Set up hygiene facilities: change areas, clean eating areas, showers, and hand washing stations  
Use HEPA vacuums or wet methods for cleaning  
Post lead warning signs: No eating or smoking  
Provide respirators, fit testing, medical evaluations  
Inspect, clean, maintain, and store respirators properly  
Provide protective clothing and other equipment  
Provide blood lead tests within 2 days of exposure and repeat monthly (recommended); OSHA requires repeat tests every 2 months.  
Train workers about lead hazards, controls, respirators
Make daily inspections by competent person; keep logs
Provide medical exams: if blood lead level is above 40 mcg/dl; or symptoms are reported  
Remove workers from exposure: if blood lead level is above 50 mcg/dl  

EXPOSURE ASSESSMENT

If any employee is potentially exposed to the action level, air monitoring must be done. Monitoring should be done for the full shift, at least one sample for each job classification in each work area. Analysis must be performed by an accredited laboratory. Employees must be notified in writing of the results which represent the employee's exposure within five days of completion of the report. Whenever the results are above the PEL, the written notice must include a description of exposure reduction controls.

If initial results show that exposures are above the PEL, monitoring must take place every 3 months. If exposures are below the PEL but above the AL, monitoring is repeated in 6 months. Sampling must be repeated whenever there has been a change in the job that may result in increased exposure - like change in task, increase in work crews, longer work shifts, different paint layers or thickness.

ENGINEERING & WORK PRACTICE CONTROLS
Engineering and work practice controls are required to minimize lead exposure. A compliance program must be written by the employer to describe controls used on each job. Common engineering and work practice controls include:
  • removal of paint before torch cutting, grinding, rivet busting, or other lead-emitting tasks
  • vacuum shrouded power tools - grinders, scalers, needle guns
  • vacuum blasters for spot paint removal
  • chemical paint strippers
  • power saws and shears for dismantling steel instead of torches
  • cleaning work area with HEPA vacuums
  • wet methods to reduce dust

Contractors must evaluate the effectiveness of controls and make changes when air monitoring or blood lead levels increase.

HEPA (high efficiency particulate air filter) vacuums collect very tiny lead particles without exhausting them back into the air. They should be used to clean the work area and to remove dust from clothing before leaving the work area. Regular shop vacuums should never be used.

INTERIM CONTROLS

The lead standard is unique because it presumes specific levels of exposure for various tasks. Based on these presumed exposures, respirators, protective clothing, hygiene facilities and housekeeping procedures are required. These guidelines must be followed until air monitoring results indicate that these protections are not needed.

TASK

PRESUMED EXPOSURE
mcg/m 3

RESPIRATOR
Category 1: manual demolition, manual scraping, power tool cleaning with dust collector
50 - 500
Half-face APR with HEPA
Category 2: rivetbusting; grinding scaling, needlegunning without dust collector, moving containment, cleaning up abrasives
500-2500
Full face APR with HEPA, Forced air, or PAPR
Category 3: torch cutting, burning, welding, abrasive blasting
2500 +
Airline with pressure demand
APR: Air Purifying Respirator
HEPA: High Efficiency Particulate Air Filter (P-100 series)
PAPR: Powered Air Purifying Respirator

PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT

Employers must provide protective work clothing and equipment - including coveralls, gloves, hard hats, shoe covers, face shields and blasting helmets - to all workers exposed to lead levels above the PEL. Disposable coveralls can be very hot and tear easily. Cotton coveralls are more comfortable and must be laundered regularly.

Clean clothing must be provided at least weekly, and daily when exposure levels are above 200 mcg/m 3 . Contaminated clothing and equipment must never be taken home or into private vehicles. This reduces the spread of lead dust from the workplace into homes and provides added protection to employees and their families.

HYGIENE FACILITIES & SIGNS

If exposures are above the PEL, the employer must provide:
  • Change areas with separate storage areas for work clothes and street clothes
  • Showers if feasible
  • Clean eating areas
  • Handwashing facilities
  • Warning signs

WARNING LEAD WORK AREA POISON
NO SMOKING OR EATING

RESPIRATORS

Respirators must be used whenever engineering and work practice controls fail to reduce the lead level below the PEL or before an exposure assessment has been completed. Employers are responsible for supplying properly selected and fitted respirators.

Respirators should be put on before entering the work area and should only be removed in a clean area. Fit testing is done at the beginning of the job and every year thereafter. The employer must set up a respirator program which includes:

  • Written program
  • Competent person
  • Proper selection of respirators
  • Medical evaluation for all users
  • Training
  • Fit Testing
  • Regular inspection, cleaning, maintenance
  • NIOSH/MSHA respirator approval
  • Yearly evaluation of the program

AIR PURIFYING RESPIRATORS

For some construction activities, employers can provide workers with an air purifying respirator (APR) to reduce exposure. This type of respirator has a protection factor of 10 and can be used when the lead levels are below 500 mcg/m 3 . APRs come with filter and chemical cartridges that are labeled and color coded. HEPA filters which are purple or pink are used to protect against lead. If workers are exposed to solvents or other chemicals, they may need a different type of cartridge. Combination cartridges are available if workers are exposed to both dust and chemical vapors.

FILTER AND CHEMICAL CARTRIDGE COLOR CODES
Purple or Pink HEPA filter (P-100 Series)For dust, mist, fume, lead, asbestos
Black Organic vapor For solvents, strippers, paint removers
Yellow Organic vapor plus acid gases For solvents and acids

POWERED AIR PURIFYING RESPIRATORS

A tight fitting powered air purifying respirator (PAPR), with either a half- or full-facemask, has a protection factor of 50 and can be used in atmospheres up to 2500 mcg/m 3 of lead. A PAPR has a filter, a battery pack, and a fan which continuously blows cleaned air into the breathing zone. These respirators are more protective than regular cartridge respirators, and may be less cumbersome than an airline.

SUPPLIED AIR RESPIRATORS

A tight-fitting supplied air respirator (SAR) which operates in a continuous flow mode has a protection factor of 50 and can be used in atmospheres up to 2500 mcg/m 3 of lead. For higher concentrations, SARs with pressure demand must be used. SARs supply clean air through a hose attached to an air tank or compressor. To supply enough air, the respirator must be operated at the pressure and hose length specified by the manufacturer. When too many masks are connected to the compressor or the hose is too long, the air pressure in the system drops. Breathing rates can then exceed the air delivered into the facepiece and cause leakage of contaminated air into the mask - and lead exposure goes up!

FIT TESTING

Employers must provide annual fit testing to all workers before they wear any tight-fitting respirator (positive or negative pressure). Fit testing assures that the respirator face piece fits snugly on the face so that lead or other contaminants can't leak in. Poorly fitting respirators can result in overexposure and elevated blood lead levels.

Respirators come in three sizes - small, medium, large. Sizes from different manufacturers are not the same. All fit tests include wearing a respirator and performing various exercises. A qualitative test uses irritant smoke, saccharin mist, Bitrex, or banana oil. If the wearer detects the substance by irritation, smell, or taste, the mask doesn't fit. A quantitative test actually measures leakage into the mask. In this case, if excessive leakage is measured, the respirator doesn't fit. The test is repeated until the wearer passes. Facial hair, dental work and scarring can interfere with respirator fit.

Wearers: Inspect your respirator and check the face seal each time you put it on. A negative pressure check is done by closing off the filters or cartridges with your hands and inhaling deeply so that the face piece collapses slightly. If the facepiece stays collapsed against your face and there are no leaks, then the face seal is good. A positive pressure check is done by closing off the exhalation valve and exhaling gently into the facepiece. The face seal is good if you feel the mask expand without any air leaks.

MEDICAL SURVEILLANCE

The purpose of medical surveillance is to measure exposure to lead, detect any adverse health effects, and evaluate the effectiveness of workplace controls. Medical surveillance also protects reproductive ability for men and women. All workers who are exposed at or above the action level, must have medical monitoring .

BLOOD LEAD TESTS

All workers exposed to the action level for one day must have blood lead (BLL) and zinc protoporphyrin (ZPP) or free erythrocyte protoporphyrin (FEP) tests. A blood lead test is a good indicator of lead exposure in the previous 2-3 weeks. The ZPP can indicate high lead exposure over the previous 2-3 months. OSHA requires that blood tests be taken every two months, but many occupational physicians recommend that blood tests be repeated monthly.

INTERPRETING BLOOD TEST RESULTS

Test results are given in micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood (mcg/dl). Normal blood lead levels are below 10 mcg/dl. Levels above normal indicate exposure to lead as follows:

  • 10 mcg/dl - normal
  • 25 mcg/dl - moderate exposure
  • 40 mcg/dl - high exposure
  • 50 mcg/dl - medical removal

The FEP or ZPP level is considered normal if it is below 35 mcg/dl. Usually the ZPP does not exceed 35 mcg/dl unless the BLL has been greater than 50 mcg/dl in the previous 2-3 months.

Remember, these levels are for adults. Children are much more vulnerable to the effects of lead. Children may be exposed if workers bring home lead dust on shoes or clothing. This is the main reason why work clothes and protective equipment should stay on the job.

MEDICAL EVALUATIONS

Medical evaluations are paid for by the employer and include detailed work history, medical history and physical exam. These exams must be provided to any worker who has:

  • a blood lead level above 40 mcg/dl
  • signs and symptoms of lead poisoning
  • concerns about having a healthy baby
  • difficulty breathing through a respirator
  • been medically removed from a job
MEDICAL REMOVAL

If a worker's blood lead level is above 50 mcg/dl on two consecutive tests within 2 weeks, he or she must be removed from further lead exposure. The employer may transfer the worker to a job with no lead exposure until the blood lead level is below 40 mcg/dl on two consecutive tests. During medical removal, full wages, benefits and seniority are protected.

CHELATION

Chelating drugs can be used by physicians to reduce the amount of lead in the blood and body tissues. Chelation is a medical treatment for lead poisoning and should never be done to keep a worker on the job. When chelation therapy is used to reduce blood lead levels, all exposure to lead must be stopped.

HAZARD COMMUNICATION

The OSHA Hazard Communication Standard requires employers to develop and implement a written HazCom program with:
  • a list of hazardous materials, including lead, on site
  • material safety data sheets (MSDSs)
  • training for all exposed workers
  • labels for all chemical product containers

CHECKLIST: WORKER RESPONSIBILITIES

 Use engineering controls, like vacuum-shrouded tools, to reduce lead exposure; remove paint before torch cutting or other disturbance.
 Keep the work site clean. Use HEPA vacuums and wet methods to clean up lead dust. Never dry sweep or use compressed air.
Use the properly selected respirator. Make it is clean and check the fit each it is worn.
 Wash hands and face before eating, drinking, smoking, or applying cosmetics. Eat and drink only in clean areas.
 Use protective clothing. Keep street clothes in separate lockers on the job. Protect children by keeping work equipment away from family areas.
 Shower and change into clean clothes and shoes before leaving the work site to avoid bringing lead contamination home.

THE MOUNT SINAI-IRVING J. SELIKOFF CENTER FOR OCCUPATIONAL & ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE

CONSTRUCTION HYGIENE AND ERGONOMICS PROGRAM
BOX 1057
1 GUSTAVE L. LEVY PLACE
NEW YORK, NY 10029
212/241-2930
212/241-0108
FAX: 212/987-6407