OSHA
Directives
CPL
2-1.28A - Compliance Assistance for the Powered Industrial Truck Operator
Training Standards
- Record Type:
Instruction
- Directive
Number: CPL 2-1.28A
- Subject:
Compliance Assistance for the Powered Industrial Truck Operator Training
Standards
- Information
Date: 11/30/2000
| DIRECTIVE NUMBER: CPL 2-1.28A |
EFFECTIVE DATE: NOVEMBER 30,
2000 |
| SUBJECT:
Compliance Assistance for the Powered Industrial Truck Operator
Training Standards |
ABSTRACT
| Purpose: |
This
instruction updates compliance assistance for the revised powered
industrial truck operator training standard. |
| Scope: |
OSHA-wide. |
| References: |
29
CFR 1910.16(a)(2)(x), .16(b)(2)(xiv) and .178(l), 1915.120,
1917.1(a)(2)(xiv), 1918.1(b)(10) and 1926.602(d); OSHA Instruction
CPL 2.103, Field Inspection Reference Manual (FIRM), 9/26/94; ANSI
B56.1-1969, Safety Standard for Powered Industrial Trucks; Seat Belt
Enforcement Memorandum, 10/9/96; OSHA Instruction CPL 2.111,
Citation Policy for Paperwork and Written Program Requirement
Violations, 11/27/95; 63 FR 66237, 12/1/98. |
| State Impact: |
See
paragraph V. |
| Action Offices: |
National, Regional, and Area Offices. |
| Originating Office: |
Directorate of Compliance Programs
(DCP). |
| Contact: |
Patrick Kapust Directorate of Compliance Programs (202)
693-1850 200 Constitution Ave, NW, Room N3603 Washington, DC
20210 Directorate of Construction (202) 693-2345 200
Constitution Ave, NW, Room N3467 Washington, DC
20210 |
By and Under the
Authority of Charles N. Jeffress Assistant Secretary
Significant
Changes
This update of
Instruction CPL 2-1.28 is needed since OSHA is reviewing the appropriate
training and coverage of personnel and burden carriers. Reference to this
type of powered industrial truck has been deleted from Appendix A, page
A-4, Question 12, of the Instruction. Therefore, OSHA Offices are not to
enforce the powered industrial truck operator training standard for
Personnel and Burden Carriers, ASME B56.8.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
-
Purpose
-
Scope
-
References
-
Action
Information
-
Federal
Program Change
-
Application
-
Background
-
Standard
Overview
-
General
Inspection Guidelines
-
Enforcement
Guidance for the Longshoring and Marine Terminal
Industries
| APPENDIX
A |
1910.178(l) - Questions and Answers |
| APPENDIX
B |
Enforcement of the Use of Seat Belts on Powered Industrial
Trucks in General Industry October 9, 1996 |
| APPENDIX
C |
National Maritime Safety Association Settlement AgreementJuly
14, 2000 |
INDEX
-
Purpose. This instruction provides compliance
assistance to ensure uniform enforcement of the revised powered
industrial truck operator training standards.
-
Scope. This instruction applies
OSHA-wide.
-
References.
-
29 CFR
1910.16(a)(2)(x), .16(b)(2)(xiv) and .178(l), 1915.120,
1917.1(a)(2)(xiv), 1918.1(b)(10) and 1926.602(d).
-
OSHA Instruction
CPL 2.103, Field Inspection Reference Manual (FIRM),
9/26/94.
-
ANSI B56.1-1969,
Safety Standard for Powered Industrial Trucks.
-
OSHA Instruction
CPL 2.111, Citation Policy for Paperwork and Written Program
Requirement Violations, 11/27/95.
-
Seat Belt
Enforcement Memorandum, 10/9/96.
-
63 FR 66237,
Powered Industrial Truck Operator Training; Final Rule;
12/1/98.
-
National Maritime
Safety Association Settlement Agreement, 7/14/00.
-
Action Information.
-
Responsible
Office. Directorate of Compliance Programs (DCP).
-
Action
Offices. National, Regional and Area Offices.
-
Information
Offices. State Plan States, Consultation Project
Managers.
-
Federal Program Change. This instruction
describes a Federal Program Change for which State adoption is not
required.
NOTE: In order to
effectively enforce safety and health standards, guidance to compliance
staff is necessary. Therefore, although adoption of this instruction is
not required, States are expected to have enforcement policies and
procedures which are at least as effective as those of Federal OSHA. In
the interest of national maritime policy, those States which cover
longshoring and marine terminals, as well as those with public sector
employees engaged in these activities, are encouraged to follow the
provisions in paragraph X, Enforcement Guidance for the Longshoring and
Marine Terminal Industries, of this Instruction.
-
Application. These standards apply to all
industries except agricultural operations.
-
Background. The previous powered industrial
truck operator training standard in part 1910 was adopted from the
national consensus standard, American National Standards Institute
(ANSI) B56.1-1969, Safety Standard for Powered Industrial Trucks. The
previous standard required that only trained operators who were
authorized to do so could operate powered industrial trucks and that
methods of training in the safe operation of powered industrial trucks
be devised.
Since promulgation
of the OSHA standard, the powered industrial truck consensus standard
(B56.1) has undergone five complete revisions. The B56.1 consensus
standard has substantially upgraded its recommended training
requirements. In view of this fact, interested persons requested that
OSHA improve its training requirements for powered industrial truck
operators.
The revised training
requirements (63 FR 66237, 12/1/98) incorporate performance requirements
that provide flexibility to employers in developing methods of training
for powered industrial truck operators. These standards require the
development of a training program that bases the amount, type, degree,
and sufficiency of training on the knowledge of the trainee and the
ability of the vehicle operator to acquire, retain, and use the
knowledge and skills necessary to safely operate the truck. These
standards also require a periodic evaluation of each operator's
performance; and refresher training based primarily on unsafe operation,
an accident or near miss, deficiencies found in a periodic evaluation of
the operator, the introduction of different equipment, or a change in a
workplace condition that affects safe operation.
The revised training
requirements are intended to enhance the safe operation of powered
industrial trucks in the workplace. Compliance with these revised
training requirements will significantly decrease the number of injuries
and fatalities resulting from unsafe powered industrial truck
operations.
-
Standard Overview. The training requirement
found in 29 CFR 1910.178(l) for operators of powered industrial trucks
and the same requirement for operators of powered industrial trucks in
the construction [1926.602(d)] and maritime [1915.120, 1910.16(a)(2)(x),
1910.16(b)(2)(xiv), 1917.1(a)(2)(xiv), 1918.l(b)(10)] industries specify
that the employer must develop a complete training program. OSHA
requires that operators of powered industrial trucks be trained in the
operation of such vehicles before they are allowed to operate them
independently. The training must consist of instruction (both
classroom-type and practical training) in proper vehicle operation, the
hazards of operating the vehicle in the workplace, and the requirements
of the OSHA standard for powered industrial trucks. Operators who have
completed training must then be evaluated while they operate the vehicle
in the workplace. Operators must also be periodically evaluated (at
least once every three years) to ensure that their skills remain at a
high level and must receive refresher training whenever there is a
demonstrated need. To maximize the effectiveness of the training, OSHA
will not require training that is duplicative of other training the
employee has previously received if the operator has been evaluated and
found competent to operate the truck safely. Finally, the training
provisions require that the employer certify that the training and
evaluations have been conducted.
-
General Inspection Guidelines. The following
guidelines will assist the CSHO in determining compliance with the
revised powered industrial truck operator training standard during
compliance inspections.
-
Inquire about the
employer's method of powered industrial truck operator training
program implementation (formal instruction, practical training), and
evaluation of the operator's performance in the workplace. Ensure that
all training is conducted by a person who has the knowledge, training
and experience to train operators and evaluate their
competence.
-
Determine whether
the employer has trained employees in the applicable topics listed in
1910.178(l)(3).
-
Determine whether
powered industrial truck operators have received training in the
operating instructions, warnings, or precautions listed in the
operator's manual for the types of vehicle that the employee is being
trained to operate, including operator's instructions, warnings, or
precautions regarding seat belt use (operator restraint systems).
Employers not providing training in the operating instructions,
warnings, or precautions listed in the manufacturer's operator's
manual related to seat belt use may be cited under
1910.178(l)(3)(i)(M).
Seat belts in
forklift trucks are a component part of an operator restraint system
that is designed to reduce the incidence and severity of injuries to
the operator in the event of a tipover accident. Forklift trucks are
particularly susceptible to tipovers. Failure to wear the seat belt
that is provided in the forklift increases the risk of injury to the
operator in the event of such an accident. Section 1910.178 does not
currently contain requirements for the use of operator restraint
systems. However, Section 5(a)(1) of the OSH Act requires employers to
protect employees from serious and recognized hazards. Recognition of
the hazard of forklift tipover and the need for operators to use an
operator restraint system is evidenced by certain requirements in the
more current version of ANSI B56.1 consensus standard for powered
industrial trucks, and ASME B56.1-2000 - Safety Standard for Low Lift
and High Lift Trucks. In addition, seat belts have been supplied by
many manufacturers of counterbalanced, center control, high lift
trucks that have a sit-down nonelevating operator position. OSHA's
enforcement policy on the use of seat belts on powered industrial
trucks is that employers are obligated to require operators of powered
industrial trucks that are equipped with operator restraint devices,
including seat belts, to use the devices. CSHOs will enforce the use
of such devices under Section 5(a)(1) of the OSH Act in accordance
with the October 9, 1996 Seat Belt Enforcement Memorandum.
-
When possible,
observe powered industrial truck operations to determine if trucks are
being operated safely, and conduct employer/employee interviews to
verify training program implementation.
-
Determine whether
the employer has certified that all required training and evaluations
have been conducted. In accordance with OSHA Instruction CPL 2.111,
Citation Policy for Paperwork and Written Program Requirement
Violations, the following will apply when citing 1910.178(l)(6): When
the employer has properly trained and evaluated powered industrial
truck operators, but has failed to certify that the action was taken,
no citation will be issued. The requirement for certification and the
reasons for the requirement will be explained to the employer and the
action noted in the case file. The employer will also be informed of
possible penalties for subsequent violations.
-
When employers are
cited for violations of the powered industrial truck operator training
standard, the Area Director will be responsible for determining the
classification of violations cited under the powered industrial truck
operator training standard in accordance with the FIRM (OSHA
Instruction CPL 2.103).
-
APPENDIX A
provides a list of questions and answers to assist in compliance with
the powered industrial truck operator training standards. APPENDIX B
provides a copy of the October 9, 1996 Seat belt enforcement
memorandum and APPENDIX C provides a copy of the July 14, 2000
National Maritime Safety Association Settlement
Agreement.
-
Enforcement Guidance for the Longshoring and Marine
Terminal Industries. The following guidance will be applied in
enforcing the powered industrial truck operator training standard in the
Longshoring and Marine Terminal Industries (SIC 4491). This guidance has
been developed to implement the Settlement Agreement attached as
Appendix C, and OSHA is required to follow the terms of this Settlement
Agreement in enforcing the standard with respect to Longshoring and
Marine Terminal operations.
-
Compliance
Deadlines. There are two compliance deadlines for employers that
have employees that regularly operated powered industrial trucks prior
to December 1, 1998 and employees that did not regularly operate a
powered industrial truck prior to December 1, 1998.
-
Employers must
comply with all provisions of the standard, as set forth herein, by
October 1, 2001 with respect to workers who regularly operated a
powered industrial truck in the longshoring or marine terminal
workplace before December 1, 1998.
-
Employers must
comply with all provisions of the standard, as set forth herein, by
June 30, 2001 with respect to workers who did not regularly operate
a powered industrial truck in the longshoring or marine terminal
workplace before December 1, 1998.
-
Prior to June
30, 2001 or October 1, 2001, whichever is applicable, if those
employers are not in full compliance with 1910.178(l), they must
ensure that their powered industrial truck operators are adequately
trained as required by 1917.27 for marine terminals and 1918.98 for
longshoring.
-
Training,
Evaluation and Certification by a Third Party. The person or
persons who conduct training, refresher training, evaluations, and
certification of operators under 1910.178(l) need not be employed by
the employer of those operators. Such third-party training, including
appropriate on-the-job training, may be provided by an employers'
association, a labor union, joint labor-management training
organization, or any other organization meeting the requirements of
the standard. However, citations for failure to train will always be
issued to the employer.
-
The employer may
rely on a third-party trainer's certification that an employee has
been trained and evaluated to operate a particular type of powered
industrial truck in accordance with the standard if the training
entity presents to the employer verification that the training
program conforms to the standard and includes a list of topics
covered by the training. The employer must make the verification
available to OSHA upon request.
-
If a powered
industrial truck operator is certified under the preceding
paragraph, the employer must provide additional training in any of
those topics only when its powered industrial truck operators will
be potentially exposed to hazardous workplace-related conditions
that could not reasonably have been foreseen when the training took
place. Before employees operate powered industrial trucks under
these conditions, the employer must brief them about the conditions
and how to operate the powered industrial truck safely under those
conditions.
-
Three-Year
Evaluations and Certification Records. An employer may comply with
the requirement of 1910.178(l)(4)(iii) that an operator has been
evaluated at three-year intervals if it knows that a third party has
conducted the required evaluation and the third party certifies the
evaluation pursuant to 1910.178(l)(6). If such evaluations, which can
be based on the review of records by an existing entity, such as a
joint labor-management committee, are made in the normal course of
business, they need not be repeated for purposes of this
paragraph.
-
The
certification required by 1910.178(l)(6) may be performed, and the
records of such certification maintained, by a third-party trainer.
The certification records must identify the types of equipment on
which the operator has been trained and evaluated.
-
If an employer
does not regularly employ the same operators, such as where powered
industrial truck operators are assigned by a hiring hall, the
employer does not need to maintain the records at its own worksite.
The employer must know where the records are located, and they must
be accessible to an OSHA compliance officer during an inspection.
Failure of an employer to provide the certification records under
these conditions would be cited under
1910.178(l)(6).
-
Avoidance of
Duplicative Training of Experienced Operators. An employee who,
prior to December 1, 1998, has regularly operated a particular type of
powered industrial truck in a marine terminal or longshoring
operation, which operation can be determined by an existing entity
such as a joint labor-management committee, may be certified under
1910.178(l)(6) to operate that type of powered industrial truck if one
of the following provisions has been met:
-
Written
documentation establishes that the employee has previously been
trained and evaluated on all of the training topics listed in
1910.178(l)(3) that are applicable to that type of powered
industrial truck; or
-
The employee's
operation of the type of powered industrial truck is evaluated under
circumstances that typically prevail in the marine terminal and/or
longshoring workplaces in which the operator normally works by a
person or entity with the requisite knowledge, skills, and
experience to perform evaluations, and the employee is found
competent to perform the operator's duties safely. If the
evaluations, which can be based on the review of records by an
existing entity, such as a joint labor-management committee, are
conducted during the normal course of business, they need not be
repeated for purposes of this paragraph.
-
Refresher
Training and Evaluation.
-
A powered
industrial truck operator must receive refresher training under
1910.178(l)(4)(ii)(A) or (C) if a workplace observation by a
supervisor or other qualified person indicates that the operator is
deficient in some of the requisite knowledge and skills needed to
operate the vehicle safely. If the observer determines that the
deficiencies in the operator's knowledge and skills can be corrected
by on-the-job instruction, the observer or another qualified person
may immediately provide such instruction. After such instruction,
the observer or other qualified person may reevaluate the operator's
performance in the workplace and, if the operator demonstrates that
he or she possesses the knowledge and skills to operate the
equipment safely, the operator may continue to operate the powered
industrial truck without any further training and without affecting
his or her certification. If on-the-job instruction is not
sufficient to obviate the deficiencies in the operator's knowledge
and skills, the operator must receive such additional refresher
training and evaluation as is necessary to ensure that the operator
has the knowledge and skills needed to operate the powered
industrial truck safely.
-
An operator must
receive refresher training and evaluation under
1910.178(l)(4)(ii)(B) when the operator has been involved in an
incident in which the operator's operation of the powered industrial
truck caused or contributed to personal injury or property damage or
provided other clear evidence that the operator operated the
equipment unsafely. In the event that an OSHA inspection of the
incident is conducted, the CSHO will include in the case file and
account for any facts and conclusions developed by an independent
inquiry of the factors underlying the incident which are made
available to the CSHO during the inspection or within 14 days of the
incident, whichever is later.
-
Generic
Training. An operator who has been trained on a particular type of
powered industrial truck may, without additional training, operate
other makes and models of the same type of truck that have
fundamentally similar operating characteristics and placement of
operating controls. Similarly, an employee who has been trained to use
a particular type of powered industrial truck attachment need not
receive additional training to use a fundamentally similar make or
model of the same type of attachment for the same type of
truck.
-
Seat belt
Training. Powered industrial truck operator training programs must
cover equipment manufacturers' recommendations as to the use of seat
belts under 1910.178(l)(3)(i); such programs may also address the
hazards, if any, in the opinion of the training provider, that seat
belt use could cause in a particular work situation in the marine
cargo handling industry.
APPENDIX A
1910.178(l) -
Questions and Answers
Paragraph
(l)(1)(i) requires that each powered industrial truck operator have the
competency to operate a powered industrial truck safely.
-
Can an employee be
allowed to operate a powered industrial truck if the employee can't
read?
Yes, during
training and evaluation, a determination must be made whether the
employee has the knowledge and skills to perform the job. For example,
if the employee cannot read and comprehend the operator's manuals for
the types of trucks the employee will operate, then this information
would have to be taught by means other than having the employee try to
read the truck manuals. Information obtained during the initial
employee evaluation can be used to, among other things, determine how
best to train the employees.
-
Can an employee
with poor vision in one eye or a hearing impairment be allowed to
operate a powered industrial truck?
The employer has
the responsibility under this training standard to ensure that each
operator is capable of performing the duties that are required of the
job.
The Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) addresses the issue of whether employers may
impose physical qualifications upon employees or applicants for
employment. The ADA permits employers to adopt medical qualification
requirements necessary to ensure that an individual does not pose a
"direct threat to the health or safety of other
individuals in the workplace," provided all reasonable efforts are
made to accommodate otherwise qualified individuals. The employer
should consult with appropriate medical personnel to assist in
determining operator physical qualifications.
Paragraph
(l)(2)(i) allows trainees to operate a powered industrial
truck.
-
When can a powered
industrial truck operator trainee operate a powered industrial truck
in the workplace?
An operator
trainee can operate a truck only under the direct supervision of a
person who has the knowledge, training, and experience to train
operators and evaluate their competence, and where such operation does
not endanger the trainee or other employees.
-
What industries
are covered by these training requirements?
The powered
industrial truck operator training requirements apply to all
industries in which the trucks are being used, except agricultural
operations.
Paragraph
(l)(2)(ii) requires that the training consist of a combination of formal
instruction, practical training, and evaluation of the operator's
performance in the workplace.
-
Can my powered
industrial truck operator training consist only of formal instruction
such as watching a videotape?
No, OSHA requires
a combination of formal instruction and practical training. Although
formal training is invaluable for teaching the principles of vehicle
operation, it is the hands-on training and evaluation of vehicle
operation that finally proves the adequacy of the training and the
ability of the employee to use that training successfully.
-
Can tool box
meetings or informal discussions be considered formal
instruction?
Yes, tool box
meetings or informal discussions can be considered formal instruction
when the principles of safe powered industrial truck operation are
covered by the designated trainer.
Paragraph
(l)(2)(iii) requires that all operator training and evaluation be
conducted by a person who has the knowledge, training, and experience to
train powered industrial truck operators and evaluate their
competence.
-
How could an
employer determine the qualifications of trainers?
An example of a
qualified trainer would be a person who, by possession of a recognized
degree, certificate, or professional standing, or who by knowledge,
training and experience, has demonstrated the ability to train and
evaluate powered industrial truck operators.
-
Can the person
providing the training come from outside the company?
Yes, the employer
may authorize a trainer from outside the company to conduct the
training, such as a training consultant or a manufacturer's
representative. Nonetheless, the employer must have evidence that the
operators have been trained in the required program topics.
Some employers
believe they must use an outside training consultant. However, an
employer may utilize an employee who has the knowledge, training, and
experience to provide training and evaluation.
-
When a Powered
Industrial Truck operator is assigned to an employer by a union hiring
hall and works for more than one employer over a period of time, which
employer is responsible for ensuring that the operator has been
trained and evaluated under the standard?
Each employer for
whom an employee works is responsible for ensuring that the employee
has been trained in accordance with the standard. In hiring hall
situations, the training under 1910.178(l)(3)(i), Truck-related topics, may be conducted by a labor
union, joint labor/management training organization, an association of
employers, or another third-party trainer as long as the person(s)
conducting the training have the knowledge, training, and experience
to properly conduct the training. An individual employer that relies
on such training would not be relieved of the provisions of
1910.178(l)(3)(ii), Workplace-related topics,
which provides for training on site-specific matters. But, the
employer need not duplicate training if the outside training covered
all of the employer's site-specific conditions. However, see the
specific guidance for Longshoring and Marine Terminal industries at
paragraph X.
-
Can the evaluation
required by (l)(2)(ii) be based entirely on observation of the
operator in a training facility outside the workplace?
No. The evaluation
must take place in the workplace so that the evaluator can observe the
operator under actual workplace conditions. However, see the specific
guidance for Longshoring and Marine Terminal industries at paragraph
X.
In paragraph
(l)(3) OSHA has provided a list of subjects to ensure that the training
contains the appropriate information for the operator.
-
Are employers
required to train powered industrial truck operator trainees in all of
the topics listed in paragraph (l)(3)?
It is the
responsibility of the employer to select the particular items that are
pertinent to the type of trucks that the employee will be allowed to
operate, and the work environment in which the vehicle will be
operated. The employer may leave out elements if the employer can
demonstrate that they are not relevant to safe operation in the
employer's workplace.
-
Do these training
requirements apply only to high lift and low lift
trucks?
No, these
requirements apply to all types of powered industrial trucks,
including specialized powered industrial trucks covered by ?.178(a).
The training standard applies to vehicles covered by volumes of the
consensus standard such as: Low Lift and High Lift Trucks, ASME B56.1;
Guided Industrial Vehicles, ASME B56.5; Rough Terrain Forklift Trucks,
ASME B56.6; Industrial Crane Trucks, ASME B56.7; and Operator
Controlled Industrial Tow Tractors, ASME B56.9. The standard does not
apply to earth moving equipment or vehicles used for over-the-road
hauling. Therefore, equipment that was designed to move earth but has
been modified to accept forks is not covered by the powered industrial
truck operator training standard.
-
Must an employee
receive separate training in each make and model of powered industrial
truck that the employee operates?
No. An operator
who has been trained on a particular type of powered industrial truck
(e.g., a sit-down counterbalanced rider truck) may, without additional
training, operate other makes and models of that same type of truck,
unless there is a significant difference in the applicable
truck-related and workplace-related topics listed in paragraph (l)(3)
for the different make and model of truck. In addition, an employee
who has been trained to use a particular type of powered industrial
truck attachment need not receive additional training to use a
fundamentally similar make or model of the same type of attachment for
the same type of truck.
-
Would these
training requirements include training operators in the use of
operator restraint systems?
Yes. For several
years, sit-down counterbalanced powered industrial trucks have been
equipped by the manufacturer with operator restraint systems.
Manufacturers' operators' manuals instruct and warn operators to use
operator restraint systems. Employers are required by paragraph (l)(3)
to train employees in all operating instructions, warnings and
precautions listed in the operator's manual for the type of vehicle
which the employee is being trained to operate. Therefore, operators
must be trained in the use of operator restraint systems addressed in
the operating instructions.
-
Does OSHA require
employers to train operators in vehicle stability?
Employers are
required by paragraph (l)(3) to train operators in vehicle stability.
Non- mandatory Appendix A to the training standard provides guidance
to employers in understanding the basic principles of vehicle
stability.
Paragraph (l)(4)
specifies that an evaluation be conducted of each powered industrial
truck operator's performance.
-
How often are
evaluations required to be conducted after training has been
successfully completed?
The employer must
conduct evaluations at least once every three years and as part of the
initial training provided to the operator. In addition, for operators
provided refresher training under the standard, an evaluation of the
effectiveness of that refresher training must be performed. This
evaluation does not have to be formalized but must consist of a person
who has the knowledge, training, and experience observing each
operator perform all typical operations to ensure that the powered
industrial truck is being operated safely. OSHA requires that a more
extensive evaluation be conducted at least once every three
years.
-
When would
refresher training be required?
Refresher training
is required when information available to the employer shows that the
employee lacks the skills or knowledge to operate the truck safely. If
the employee has been observed operating the vehicle in an unsafe
manner, has been involved in an accident or near miss, or has received
an evaluation that reveals the employee is not operating the truck
safely, refresher training is required. In addition, refresher
training is required when the employee is assigned to drive a
different type of truck or a condition in the workplace changes that
could affect the safe operation of the truck. An evaluation of the
effectiveness of the refresher training is
required.
Paragraph (l)(6)
requires that the employer certify that the required training and
evaluations have been conducted.
-
What does OSHA
require the employer to include in the certification that the required
training and evaluations have been conducted?
The certification
consists of the name of the operator, the dates of the training, the
date of the evaluation, and the identity of the person(s) conducting
the training and evaluation.
Paragraph (l)(5)
allows the employer to forgo that portion of the training that an
employee has previously received.
-
Is it necessary to
retrain powered industrial truck operators if they have already
received training in some of the topics listed in paragraph
(l)(3)?
The employer must
evaluate the applicability and adequacy of an operator's prior
training. Employers need not retrain an employee in a training topic
if the prior training is appropriate to the truck and working
conditions encountered. Additional training in that topic is not
required if the operator is evaluated and found to operate the truck
safely.
Longshoring and
Marine Terminal Operations.
-
What is meant by
the term "regularly operated" as discussed for powered industrial
truck operators in the longshoring and marine terminal
industries?
Many longshoring
and marine terminal employees had substantial experience operating
PITs prior to December 1, 1998, when the standard was issued. The term
"regularly operated" is used to distinguish between those employees
who had substantial experience operating a PIT prior to December 1,
1998 and those who did not. Employees who were listed as powered
industrial truck operators by a hiring hall or the employer prior to
December 1, 1998 would in most instances be considered as regular
operators. Employees who were not listed as qualified to operate a
powered industrial truck prior to December 1, 1998 by the employer or
a hiring hall shall not be considered in most instances to have
regularly operated a powered industrial truck prior to that date.
However, a determination of whether an employee regularly operated a
PIT cannot be made using a rigid formula but must take into account
factors such as:
- how long the
employee worked on the docks prior to December 1, 1998; and
- whether the
employee worked on the docks full time or part time; and
- whether the
employee normally operated a PIT as part of his/her job
responsibilities; and
- the total
number of workdays in which the employee had operated a PIT at a
longshoring or marine terminal workplace.
APPENDIX B
Enforcement of
the Use of Seat Belts on Powered Industrial Trucks in General Industry
October 9, 1996
MEMORANDUM FOR: |
REGIONAL ADMINISTRATORS |
| FROM: |
JOHN B. MILES, JR., DIRECTORATE OF COMPLIANCE
PROGRAMS |
| SUBJECT: |
Enforcement of the Use of Seat Belts on Powered
Industrial Trucks in General Industry |
It has come to my
attention that clarification is needed to ensure that a uniform approach
is taken by all OSHA offices with respect to the enforcement of the use
of seat belts on powered industrial trucks in general
industry.
American National
Standards Institute (ANSI) B56.1-1969 Safety Standard for Powered
Industrial Trucks, was adopted by OSHA under the procedures described in
Section 6(a) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act). ANSI
B56.1-1969 does not have provisions for the use of seat belts.
Therefore, 29 CFR 1910.178 does not contain requirements for the use of
seat belts. However, Section 5(a)(1) of the OSH Act require employers to
protect employees from serious and recognized hazards. Recognition of
the hazard of powered industrial truck tipover and the need for the use
of an operator restraint system is evidenced by certain requirements in
the more current versions of ANSI B56.1 consensus standard for powered
industrial trucks; ASME/ANSI B56. la-1989 Addenda to ASME/ANSI
B56.1-1988, and ASME B56.1-1993 Safety Standard for Low Lift and High
Lift Trucks. In addition, seat belts have been supplied by many
manufacturers of counterbalanced, center control, high lift trucks which
have a sit-down nonelevating operator position. Also, some manufacturers
have instituted retrofit programs for the installation of operator
restraint systems to older powered industrial trucks.
OSHA's enforcement
policy relative to the use of seat belts on powered industrial trucks is
that employers are obligated to require operators of powered industrial
trucks which are equipped with operator restraint devices or seat belts
to use the devices. OSHA should enforce the use of such devices under
Section 5(a)(1) of the OSH Act.
After consultation
with the Regional Solicitor, OSHA may also cite Section 5(a)(1) of the
OSH Act if an employer has not taken advantage of a manufacturer
operator restraint system or seat belt retrofit program.
If you have any
questions or concerns, please contact the Office of General Industry
Compliance Assistance at (202) 693-1850.
APPENDIX C
National Maritime
Safety Association Settlement Agreement July 14, 2000
IN THE UNITED STATES
COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
CIRCUIT
______________________________________________
NATIONAL MARITIME SAFETY )
ASSOCIATION, INC., )
)
Petitioner, )
)
)
vs. )
)
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH ) No. 99-1031
ADMINISTRATION, UNITED STATES )
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, AND )
ALEXIS M. HERMAN, SECRETARY, )
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR, )
)
Respondents, )
)
)
)
CARRIERS CONTAINER COUNCIL, INC. )
INTERNATIONAL LONGSHORE & WAREHOUSE UNION, )
INTERNATIONAL LONGSHOREMEN'S ASSOCIATION, )
)
Intervenors for )
Petitioner. )
______________________________________________)
SETTLEMENT
AGREEMENT
1.
Coverage. This Settlement Agreement addresses the
application of 29 CFR 1910.178(l) -- Powered Industrial Truck Operator
Training ("the standard") -- to the longshoring and marine terminal
industries (SIC 4491). The standard was issued on December 1, 1998 (63
Fed. Reg. 66238) and is made applicable to marine terminals by 29 CFR
1917.1(a)(2)(xiv) and to longshoring by 29 CFR 1918.1(b)(10).
2.
Implementation. Within 30 days of the signing of this
Settlement Agreement, OSHA shall instruct its regional and area offices
to follow the terms of this Settlement Agreement in enforcing the
standard with respect to longshoring and marine terminal operations.
OSHA shall provide this Settlement Agreement to state plan occupational
safety and health agencies and encourage that the states follow its
terms.
* *
*
3. Compliance
Deadline. Employers engaged in longshoring or marine terminal
operations shall, as to workers who did not regularly operate a powered
industrial truck (PIT) in a marine terminal or longshoring workplace
before December 1, 1998, comply with all provisions of the standard, as
set forth herein, by June 30, 2001. With respect to workers who
regularly operated a PIT in a marine terminal or longshoring workplace
before December 1, 1998, employers must comply with all provisions of
the standard, as set forth herein, by October 1, 2001. Prior to June 30,
2001 or October 1, 2001, whichever is applicable, if those employers are
not in full compliance with 1910.178(l), they must ensure that their
powered industrial truck operators are adequately trained as required by
1917.27 for marine terminals and 1918.98 for longshoring.
4. Training,
Evaluation and Certification by a Third Party. The person or
persons who conduct training, refresher training, evaluations, and
certification of operators under 29 CFR 1910.178(l) need not be employed
by the employer of those operators. Such third-party training, including
appropriate on-the-job training, may be provided by an employers'
association, a labor union, a joint labor-management training
organization, or any other organization meeting the requirements of the
standard.
An employer may rely
on a third-party trainer's certification that an employee has been
trained and evaluated to operate a particular type of powered industrial
truck in accordance with the standard if the training entity presents to
the employer -- who shall make it available to OSHA upon request --
verification that the training program conforms to the standard and
includes a list of topics covered by the training. When an operator has
been certified under the preceding sentence, the employer must provide
additional training in any of those topics only when its powered
industrial truck operator[s] will be potentially exposed to hazardous
workplace-related conditions that could not reasonably have been
foreseen when the training took place. Before its employees operate
powered industrial trucks under such conditions, the employer shall
brief them about the conditions and in how to operate the powered
industrial truck safely under those conditions.
* *
*
5. Three-Year
Evaluations and Certification Records. An employer may comply
with the requirement of § 1910.178(l)(4)(iii) that an operator has been
evaluated at three-year intervals if it knows that a third party has
conducted the required evaluation and the third party certifies the
evaluation pursuant to § 1910.178(l)(6). If such evaluations, which can
be based on the review of records by an existing entity, such as a joint
labor-management committee, are made in the normal course of business,
they need not be repeated for purposes of this paragraph.
The certification
required by § 1910.178(l)(6) may be performed, and the records of such
certification maintained, by a third-party trainer. The certification
records must identify the types of equipment on which the operator has
been trained and evaluated. Where an employer does not regularly employ
the same operators, such as where operators are assigned by a hiring
hall, the employer does not need to maintain the records at its own
worksite. The employer must, however, know where the records are
located, and they must be accessible to an OSHA compliance officer
during a workplace inspection.
* *
*
6. Avoidance
of Duplicative Training of Experienced Operators. An employee
who, prior to December 1, 1998, has regularly operated a particular type
of PIT in a marine terminal or longshoring operation, which can be
determined by an existing entity such as a joint labor-management
committee, may be certified under § 1910.178(l)(6) to operate that type
of PIT if (a) written documentation establishes that the employee has
previously been trained and evaluated in all of the training topics
listed in § 1910.178(l)(3) that are applicable to that type of PIT; or
(b) the employee's operation of the type of PIT is evaluated under
circumstances that typically prevail in the marine terminal and/or
longshoring workplaces in which the operator normally works by a person
or entity with the requisite knowledge, skills, and experience to
perform evaluations, and the employee is found competent to perform the
operator's duties safely. If such evaluations, which can be based on the
review of records by an existing entity, such as a joint
labor-management committee, are made in the normal course of business,
they need not be repeated for purposes of this paragraph.
* *
*
7. Refresher
Training and Evaluation. A PIT operator shall receive refresher
training under § 1910.178(l)(4)(ii)(A) or (C) if a workplace observation
by a supervisor or other qualified person indicates that the operator is
deficient in some of the requisite knowledge and skills needed to
operate the vehicle safely. If the observer determines that the
deficiencies in the operator's knowledge and skills can be corrected by
on-the-job instruction, the observer or another qualified person may
immediately provide such instruction. After any such instruction, the
observer or other qualified person may reevaluate the operator's
performance in the workplace and, if the operator is then able to
demonstrate that he or she possesses the knowledge and skills to operate
the equipment safely, the operator may continue to operate the PIT
without any further training and without affecting his or her
certification. If on-the-job instruction is not sufficient to cure the
deficiencies in the operator's knowledge and skills, the operator shall
receive such additional refresher training and evaluation as is
necessary to ensure that the operator has the knowledge and skills
needed to operate the powered industrial truck safely.
An operator shall
receive refresher training and evaluation under § 1910.178(l)(4)(ii)(B)
when the operator has been involved in an incident in which the
operator's operation of the PIT caused or contributed to personal injury
or property damage or provided other clear evidence that the operator
operated the equipment unsafely. In the event that an OSHA inspection of
the incident is conducted, the OSHA inspector will include in the case
file and will account for any facts and conclusions developed by an
independent inquiry of the factors underlying the incident which are
made available to the inspector during the inspection or within 14 days
of the incident, whichever is later. The affected parties may contact
the inspector to discuss the results of the independent
inquiry.
* *
*
8. Generic
Training. An operator who has been trained on a particular type
of powered industrial truck may, without additional training, operate
other makes and models of the same type of truck that have fundamentally
similar operating characteristics and placement of operating controls.
Similarly, an employee who has been trained to use a particular type of
powered industrial truck attachment need not receive additional training
to use a fundamentally similar make or model of the same type of
attachment for the same type of truck.
* *
*
9. Seatbelt
Training. Powered industrial truck operator training programs
must cover equipment manufacturers' recommendations as to the use of
seatbelts under § 1910.178(l)(3)(I); such programs may also address the
hazards, if any, in the opinion of the training provider, that seat belt
use could cause in a particular work situation in the marine cargo
handling industry.
* *
*
10. Withdrawal
of Law Suit. NMSA agrees to withdraw its petition for review in
the above-captioned case within five working days of the signing of this
Settlement Agreement. The Parties and Intervenors signing below shall
bear their own costs and expenses incurred in connection with this
matter.
11. Support of
Settlement Agreement. In the event that all or any portion of
this Settlement Agreement is challenged in any forum, the signatories
below agree to move to intervene in support of this Settlement
Agreement.
HENRY L.
SOLANO Solicitor of Labor
JOSEPH M.
WOODWARD Associate Solicitor for Occupational Safety and Health
BRUCE
JUSTH Counsel for Appellate Litigation
________________________ CHARLES T. CARROLL, Jr.,
Esq. Wilcox, Carroll & Froelich, Suite 301, 2011 Pa.
Ave.,N.W. Washington, D.C. 20006 General Counsel,
National Maritime Safety Association
________________________ BARUCH A. FELLNER, Esq. Gibson,
Dunn & Crutcher, LLP 1050 Conn. Ave., N.W. Washington, D.C.
20036-5306 Counsel for the National Maritime Safety
Association
________________________ JOHN SHORTALL Attorney, Office
of Solicitor U.S. Department of Labor Frances Perkins Bld., Rm.
S-4004 200 Constitution Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C.
20210-0001
________________________ C. PETER LAMBOS, Esq. CAROL N.
LAMBOS, Esq. Lambos & Junge, 29 Broadway New York, New York
10006-3101 Counsel for Carriers Container Council,
Inc.
________________________ HERZL EISENSTADT, Esq. ELIZABETH
ALEXANDER, Esq. Gleason & Mathews, P.C. 26 Broadway -- 17th
Floor New York, New York 10004-1864 Counsel for
International Longshoremen's Association
________________________ CRAIG E. EPPERSON, Esq. Pacific
Maritime Association 550 California Street San Francisco, CA
94104-1060 General Counsel & Secretary, Pacific
Maritime Association
________________________ C. PETER LAMBOS, Esq. CAROL N.
LAMBOS, Esq. Lambos & Junge, 29 Broadway New York, New York
10006-3101 Counsel for United States Maritime
Alliance, Ltd.
________________________ RICHARD ZUCKERMAN, Esq. Leonard,
Carder et al. Suite 201 1188 Franklin Street San Francisco,
Calif. 94109 Counsel for the International Longshore
& Warehouse Union
July 14,
2000
INDEX
accident
certification
compliance
construction
CSHO
employee
employer
enforcement
evaluation
Federal Program
Change
FIRM
General
Industry
industrial
trucks
inspection
lift
longshoring
Maritime
operation
seat belt
standard
training
truck
|