95-3041. Logging Operations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 26 (Wednesday, February 8, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 7447-7449]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-3041]
    
    
    
    =======================================================================
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
    
    Occupational Safety and Health Administration
    
    29 CFR Part 1910
    
    [Docket No. S-048]
    
    
    Logging Operations
    
    AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
    
    ACTION: Final rule; partial stay of enforcement.
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    SUMMARY: On October 12, 1994, the Occupational Safety and Health 
    Administration (OSHA) issued a new standard for logging operations (59 
    FR 51672). This notice stays enforcement of the following paragraphs of 
    Sec. 1910.266 until August 9, 1995: (d)(1)(v) insofar as it requires 
    foot protection to be chain-saw resistant; (d)(1)(vii) insofar as it 
    requires face protection; (d)(2)(iii) for first-aid kits that contain 
    all the items listed in Appendix A; (f)(2)(iv); (f)(2)(xi); (f)(3)(ii); 
    (f)(3)(vii); (f)(3)(viii); (f)(7)(ii) insofar as it requires that 
    parking brakes be able to stop the machine; (g)(1) and (g)(2) insofar 
    as they require inspection and maintenance of employee-owned vehicles; 
    and (h)(2)(vii) insofar as it precludes backcuts at the level of the 
    horizontal cut of the undercut when the Humboldt cutting method is 
    used.
    
    DATES: Effective on February 9, 1995. The partial stay will expires on 
    August 9, 1995. The remaining requirements of Sec. 1910.266 are 
    unaffected by this document and will go into effect as scheduled on 
    February 9, 1995, or as otherwise provided in the Final Rule.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Anne Cyr, Office of Information 
    and Consumer Affairs, Occupational Safety and Health Administration, 
    Room N-3637, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW., 
    Washington, DC 20210, (202) 219-8148.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On October 12, 1994, OSHA issued a final 
    rule governing worker safety in logging operations. Among other things, 
    this rule included requirements for: personal protective equipment; 
    first aid kits at logging work sites; machine stability and slope 
    limitations; discharge of hydraulic and pneumatic storage devices on 
    forestry machines; protective structures on machines; machine braking 
    systems; vehicle inspection and maintenance; and tree harvesting. 
    Several parties have raised questions about certain aspects of these 
    requirements. After considering their questions, the Agency has 
    determined that a six-month delay in the effective date of some of the 
    provisions is appropriate in order to allow time for it to clarify 
    language in the regulatory text so that it most adequately expresses 
    its intent with respect to some of these provisions, and to provide 
    additional information on other provisions.
    
    Stay of Enforcement of Certain Provisions of Sec. 1910.266
    
        Paragraph (d)(1)(v)--Foot protection. The final logging standard 
    requires [[Page 7448]] employees to wear foot protection, such as 
    heavy-duty logging boots, that among other things, protect against 
    ``penetration by chain saws.'' Some interested persons have 
    misinterpreted this provision to require steel-toed boots, although the 
    preamble to the final rule explained that the rule does not require 
    steel-toed boots.
        OSHA has decided to grant a six-month delay in the effective date 
    of the portion of this provision that requires that foot protection be 
    chain-saw resistant. (The remaining requirements of the foot protection 
    provision will go into effect as scheduled on February 9.) This delay 
    will enable OSHA to review the logging community requirements on 
    available foot protection, including many types of heavy-duty leather 
    logging boots currently used, kevlar boots, and foot coverings that 
    provide adequate chain saw resistance. Finally, this delay will allow 
    greater availability of new products that manufacturers are developing 
    in response to the standard.
        Paragraph (d)(1)(vii)--Eye and face protection. The logging 
    standard requires loggers to wear eye and face protection meeting the 
    requirements of OSHA's general personal protection equipment (PPE) 
    standards when there is a potential for injury due to falling or flying 
    objects. Some interested persons have interpreted this provision to 
    require both eye and face protection in all cases.
        OSHA has decided to grant a six-month delay in the effective date 
    of this provision to the extent that it requires face protection. (The 
    current effective date of February 9 will continue to apply to the eye 
    protection requirement.) The delay will allow OSHA to clarify what the 
    standard requires, and to better inform employers about available face 
    protection that does not limit worker vision.
        Paragraph (d)(2)(iii)--Annual approval of first-aid kits by a 
    health care provider. Paragraph (d)(2) states that employers mut 
    provide and maintain adequate first-aid kits at each worksite, and that 
    the number and contents of the kits must be reviewed annually by a 
    health care provider. Some interested persons have interpreted the 
    standard to require that a doctor inspect each kit annually.
        OSHA has decided to grant a six-month delay in the effective date 
    of the provision requiring annual health care provider review. The 
    requirement that first-aid kits contain at least the items listed in 
    Appendix A (paragraph (d)(2)(ii)) will go into effect as scheduled on 
    February 9, 1995. During this period, OSHA will revise the statutory 
    language to clarify its original intent.
        Paragraph (f)(2)(iv)--Slope limitations on machine operation. This 
    rule states that logging machines shall not be operated on any slope 
    greater than the maximum slope recommended by the manufacturer. Some 
    parties have interpreted this provision to require manufacturers to 
    specify maximum slopes that would be applicable in all field 
    situations. OSHA is granting a six-month stay of this provision to 
    clarify this point.
        Paragraph (f)(2)(xi)--Discharge of stored energy from machine 
    hydraulic and pneumatic storage devices. This provision requires that 
    pressure or stored energy from hydraulic and pneumatic storage devices 
    be discharged after the machine engine is shut down. Some parties have 
    interpreted this provision to require discharge of air and water from 
    all machine components, even when the presence of air or water pressure 
    will not create a hazard for any employee. OSHA is granting a six-month 
    delay in order to clarify this point.
        Paragraph (f)(3)(ii)--Machine rollover protective structures. The 
    final rule requires that all rollover protective structures (ROPS) be 
    installed, tested and maintained in accordance with the Society of 
    Automotive Engineers (SAE) J1040, April 1988, performance criteria for 
    rollover protective structures (ROPS). OSHA has learned that some 
    logging equipment currently in production has not yet been designed to 
    meet the 1988 SAE criteria document. OSHA has decided to delay the 
    effective date of this requirement for six-months in order to determine 
    whether any additional extension may be appropriate.
        Paragraph (f)(3) (vii) and (viii)--Machine operator cab protective 
    structures. These provisions require that the lower portion of the 
    operator's cab be enclosed with ``solid'' material that will prevent 
    objects from entering the cab. Some parties have interpreted this 
    provision to encourage the use of materials like steel plating that may 
    restrict the operator's field of vision. OSHA is granting a six-month 
    delay in the effective date of this provision in order to clarify this 
    requirement.
        Paragraph (f)(7)(ii)--Machine braking systems. This provision 
    requires that each machine be equipped with ``a secondary braking 
    system, such as an emergency brake or a parking brake, which shall be 
    effective in stopping the machine and maintaining parking 
    performance.'' OSHA has since learned that the terminology used in this 
    provision is inconsistent with that used by some manufacturers. These 
    manufacturers consider a secondary braking system to be a subsystem of 
    the service brake system and that each subsystem should be capable of 
    stopping the machine even though the other subsystem fails. The parking 
    brake system is not designed to stop the vehicle in motion but rather 
    to restrain it once movement has stopped; thus it is not considered a 
    secondary system.
        OSHA is granting a six-month delay in this provision only to the 
    extent that it requires that parking brakes be able to stop the 
    machine. During this period, employers must still assure that each 
    machine has a service brake system that is capable of stopping the 
    machine and a parking brake system that can hold the machine and its 
    maximum load on any slope that the machine is operated. OSHA will 
    revise the terminology in this provision to clarify its intent.
        Paragraph (g) (1) and (2)--Inspection and maintenance of employee-
    owned vehicles. These provisions require that any vehicle used off 
    public roads at logging work sites or to perform any logging operation, 
    including employee-owned vehicles, be maintained in a serviceable 
    condition. Some parties have interpreted this provision to require 
    logging employers to inspect and maintain all vehicles, including those 
    employee-owned vehicles that they allow on their logging sites.
        OSHA is granting a six-month delay in the effective date of these 
    provisions insofar as they apply to employee-owned vehicles. The 
    additional time will enable OSHA to reexamine the record on this issue 
    and clarify its intent of the standard.
        Paragraph (h)(2)(vii)--Backcuts. This rule requires that backcuts 
    be above the horizontal line of the undercut. OSHA is aware that when 
    loggers use the Humboldt cutting method, in which the diagonal cut is 
    below the horizontal cut of the undercut, the backcut is at the level 
    of the horizontal cut. The Agency is granting a six-month delay in the 
    effective date of this provision only to the extent that the rule does 
    not permit loggers using the Humboldt method to place the backcut at 
    the level of the horizontal cut. (OSHA emphasizes that backcuts may 
    never be made below the horizontal cut.) OSHA will reexamine the record 
    on this issue.
    
    III. Authority
    
        This document was prepared under the direction of Joseph A. Dear, 
    Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health, U.S. 
    Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 
    20210. [[Page 7449]] 
        The actions in this document are taken pursuant to sections 4, 6, 
    and 8 of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (29 U.S.C. 653, 
    655, 657), Secretary of Labor's Order No. 1-90 (55 FR 9033), and 29 CFR 
    part 1911.
    
        Signed at Washington, DC., this 2nd day of February, 1995.
    Joseph A. Dear,
    Assistant Secretary of Labor.
    
        For the reasons set forth above, 29 CFR part 1910 is hereby amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 1910--[AMENDED]
    
        1. The Authority citation for subpart R of 29 CFR part 1910 
    continues to read as follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 4, 6, 8, Occupational Safety and Health Act of 
    1970 (29 U.S.C. 653, 655, 657); Secretary of Labor's Order No. 12-71 
    (36 FR 8754), 8-76 (41 FR 25059), 9-83 (48 FR 35736), or 1-90 (55 FR 
    9033), as applicable.
    
        Sections 1910.261, 1910.262, 1910.265, 1910.266, 1910.267, 
    1910.268, 1910.272, 1910.274, and 1910.275 also issued under 29 CFR 
    part 1911.
        Section 1910.272 also issued under 5 U.S.C. 553.
    
        2. A note is added at the end of Sec. 1910.266, to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 1910.266  Logging operations.
    
    * * * * *
        Note: In the Federal Register of February 8, 1995, OSHA stayed 
    the following paragraphs of Sec. 1910.266 from February 9, 1995 
    until August 9, 1995:
    
        1. (d)(1)(v) insofar as it requires foot protection to be chain-
    saw resistant.
        2. (d)(1)(vii) insofar as it requires face protection.
        3. (d)(2)(iii).
        4. (f)(2)(iv).
        5. (f)(2)(xi).
        6. (f)(3)(ii).
        7. (f)(3)(vii).
        8. (f)(3)(viii).
        9. (f)(7)(ii) insofar as it requires that parking brakes be able 
    to stop the machine.
        10. (g)(1) and (g)(2) insofar as they require inspection and 
    maintenance of employee-owned vehicles.
        11. (h)(2)(vii) insofar as it precludes backcuts at the level of 
    the horizontal cut of the undercut when the Humboldt cutting method 
    is used.
    
    [FR Doc. 95-3041 Filed 2-7-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4510-26-M
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/9/1995
Published:
02/08/1995
Department:
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule; partial stay of enforcement.
Document Number:
95-3041
Dates:
Effective on February 9, 1995. The partial stay will expires on August 9, 1995. The remaining requirements of Sec. 1910.266 are unaffected by this document and will go into effect as scheduled on February 9, 1995, or as otherwise provided in the Final Rule.
Pages:
7447-7449 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. S-048
PDF File:
95-3041.pdf
CFR: (2)
29 CFR 1910.266
29 CFR 1910.266