Revising the Exemption for Digger Derricks in the Cranes and Derricks in Construction Standard, 67270-67276 [2012-27210]
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67270
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 218 / Friday, November 9, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
email Shirley.McBride@faa.gov. For
legal questions concerning this action,
contact Laura Montgomery, Senior
Attorney for Commercial Space
Transportation, Office of the Chief
Counsel, Regulations Division, Federal
Aviation Administration, 800
Independence Avenue SW.,
Washington, DC 20591; telephone (202)
267–3150; facsimile (202) 267–7971;
email laura.montgomery@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
or committing the agency to any future
course of action.
The FAA withdraws Amendment No.
400–4 published at 77 FR 50584 on
August 22, 2012.
Issued in Washington, DC, on November 6,
2012.
Michael P. Huerta,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2012–27503 Filed 11–7–12; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
Background
On August 22, 2012, the FAA
published a direct final rule that would
have amended the scope of its chapter
III regulations to give operators of Class
3 advanced high-power rockets the
option of applying for a chapter III
launch license or permit, or continuing
to operate under 14 CFR chapter I, part
101. The direct final rule would have
been strictly voluntary. Only those
operators that wished to apply under
chapter III for a license needed to do so.
However, once an operator accepted an
FAA license or permit, part 101 would
no longer have applied, and the operator
would have been governed by the
provisions of chapter III for those
rockets.
The Commercial Space Launch Act
provides that the United States should
encourage private sector launches,
reentries, and associated services. The
FAA initiated the direct final rule
primarily to support those launch
operators that, under contract with
NASA, were required by NASA to
obtain an FAA launch license. Because
the rule was strictly voluntary, the FAA
believed there was good cause to issue
it as a direct final rule.
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Reason for Withdrawal
The FAA is withdrawing the direct
final rule because the agency received
several adverse comments. In brief, the
commenters raised issues concerning
the potential cost to small businesses
and the government, both in terms of
the resources necessary for preparing
and evaluating applications and in
terms of the conditional payment of
excess claims commonly referred to as
‘‘indemnification.’’ Others expressed
doubts about whether amateur rockets
could ever meet chapter III
requirements, whether applying those
requirements to smaller vehicles made
sense or was necessary, and whether
safety issues were created.
Conclusion
Withdrawal of Amendment No. 400–
4 does not preclude the FAA from a
rulemaking on the subject in the future
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
29 CFR Part 1926
[Docket ID–OSHA–2012–0025]
RIN 1218–AC75
Revising the Exemption for Digger
Derricks in the Cranes and Derricks in
Construction Standard
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA); Labor.
ACTION: Direct final rule.
AGENCY:
OSHA is broadening the
exemption for digger derricks in its
standard for cranes and derricks. OSHA
issued a final standard updating the
requirements for cranes and derricks on
August 9, 2010, and the Edison Electric
Institute (EEI) petitioned for review of
the standard in the United States Court
of Appeals. After petitioning, EEI
provided OSHA with new information
regarding digger derricks. OSHA
reviewed the additional information and
the rulemaking record, and decided to
broaden the exemption for digger
derricks used in the electric-utility
industry by means of this direct final
rule.
SUMMARY:
This direct final rule will
become effective on February 7, 2013,
unless OSHA receives significant
adverse comment to this direct final rule
by December 10, 2012. All submissions,
whether transmitted, mailed, or
delivered, must bear a postmark or
provide other evidence of the
submission date.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments
(including comments to the
information-collection (paperwork)
determination described under the
section titled AGENCY
DETERMINATIONS), hearing requests,
and other information and materials,
identified by Docket No. OSHA–2012–
0025, by any of the following methods:
Electronically: Submit comments and
attachments electronically at https://
DATES:
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www.regulations.gov, which is the
Federal eRulemaking Portal. Follow the
instructions online for submitting
comments.
Facsimile: OSHA allows facsimile
transmission of comments that are 10
pages or fewer in length (including
attachments). Fax these documents to
the OSHA Docket Office at (202) 693–
1648; OSHA does not require hard
copies of these documents. Instead of
transmitting facsimile copies of
attachments that supplement these
documents (e.g., studies, journal
articles), commenters must submit these
attachments to the OSHA Docket Office,
Technical Data Center, Room N–2625,
OSHA, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Ave., NW., Washington,
DC 20210. These attachments must
clearly identify the sender’s name, the
date, and the docket number (OSHA–
2012–0025), so that the Docket Office
can attach them to the appropriate
document.
Regular or express mail, hand
delivery, or messenger (courier) service:
Submit comments and any additional
information or material to the OSHA
Docket Office, Docket No. OSHA–2012–
0025 or RIN No. 1218–AC75, Technical
Data Center, Room N–2625, OSHA, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20210;
telephone: (202) 693–2350. (OSHA’s
TTY number is (877) 889–5627.) Contact
the OSHA Docket Office for information
about security procedures concerning
delivery of materials by express mail,
hand delivery, and messenger service.
The Docket Office will accept deliveries
(express mail, hand delivery, and
messenger service) during the Docket
Office’s normal business hours, 8:15
a.m. to 4:45 p.m. ET.
Docket: To read or download
comments or other information or
material in the docket, go to https://
www.regulations.gov or to the OSHA
Docket Office at the address above.
Documents in the docket are listed in
the https://www.regulations.gov index;
however, some information (e.g.,
copyrighted material) is not available
publicly to read or download through
this Web site. All submissions,
including copyrighted material, are
available for inspection at the OSHA
Docket Office. Contact the OSHA Docket
Office for assistance in locating docket
submissions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
General information and press inquiries:
Mr. Frank Meilinger, Director, OSHA
Office of Communications, Room N–
3647, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
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DC 20210; telephone: (202) 693–1999;
email: meilinger.francis2@dol.gov.
Technical inquiries: Mr. Garvin
Branch, Directorate of Construction,
Room N–3468, OSHA, U.S. Department
of Labor, 200 Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20210; telephone: (202)
693–2020; fax: (202) 693–1689; email:
branch.garvin@dol.gov.
For copies of this Federal Register
notice, news releases, and other relevant
document: Electronic copies of these
documents are available at OSHA’s Web
page at https://www.osha.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Request for Comment
II. Direct Final Rulemaking
III. Discussion of the Digger-Derrick
Exemption in 29 CFR 1926, Subpart CC
A. Background
B. Changes to the Text of the Exemption in
29 CFR 1926.1400(c)(4)
C. Discussion of Conforming Revisions to
29 CFR 1926, Subpart V (Power
Transmission and Distribution)
IV. Agency Determinations
A. Significant Risk
B. Final Economic Analysis and Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
C. Technological Feasibility
D. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
E. Federalism
F. State Plan States
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
H. Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1926
Authority and Signature
Amendments to Standards
I. Request for Comment
OSHA requests comments on all
issues related to this direct final rule,
including economic, paperwork, or
other regulatory impacts of this rule on
the regulated community. If OSHA
receives no significant adverse
comment, OSHA will publish a Federal
Register document confirming the
effective date of this direct final rule
and withdrawing the companion
proposed rule published in the
‘‘Proposed Rules’’ section of today’s
Federal Register. Such confirmation
may include minor stylistic or technical
changes to the document. For the
purpose of judicial review, OSHA views
the date of confirmation of the effective
date of this direct final rule as the date
of promulgation.
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II. Direct Final Rulemaking
In direct final rulemaking, an agency
publishes a direct final rule in the
Federal Register with a statement that
the rule will go into effect unless the
agency receives significant adverse
comment within a specified period. The
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agency may publish an identical
proposed rule at the same time. If the
agency receives no significant adverse
comment in response to the direct final
rule, the rule goes into effect. OSHA
typically confirms the effective date of
a direct final rule through a separate
Federal Register notice. If the agency
receives a significant adverse comment,
the agency withdraws the direct final
rule and treats such comment as a
response to the proposed rule. An
agency typically uses direct final
rulemaking when an agency anticipates
that a rule will not be controversial.
For purposes of this direct final rule,
a significant adverse comment is one
that explains why the amendments to
OSHA’s digger-derrick exemption
would be inappropriate. In determining
whether a comment necessitates
withdrawal of the direct final rule,
OSHA will consider whether the
comment raises an issue serious enough
to warrant a substantive response in a
notice-and-comment process. OSHA
will not consider a comment
recommending an additional
amendment to be a significant adverse
comment unless the comment states
why the direct final rule would be
ineffective without the addition.
Furthermore, OSHA will not consider a
comment requesting any narrowing of
the existing digger-derrick exemption to
be a significant adverse comment
because narrowing the existing
exemption is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking. Moreover, a comment
requesting an expansion of the
exemption to encompass activities not
related to digger-derrick use by electric
utilities also would be beyond the scope
of this rulemaking, and OSHA will not
consider such a comment to be a
significant adverse comment unless the
commenter explains why the provisions
of the direct final rule, as these
provisions apply to digger derricks,
would be ineffective without the
expansion.
In addition to publishing this direct
final rule, OSHA is publishing a
companion proposed rule in the
‘‘Proposed Rules’’ section of today’s
Federal Register. The comment period
for the proposed rule runs concurrently
with that of the direct final rule. OSHA
also will treat comments received on the
companion proposed rule as comments
regarding the direct final rule. Likewise,
OSHA will consider significant adverse
comment submitted to the direct final
rule as comment to the companion
proposed rule. Therefore, if OSHA
receives a significant adverse comment
on either this direct final rule or the
proposed rule, it will publish a timely
withdrawal of this direct final rule and
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proceed with the companion proposed
rule. In the event that OSHA withdraws
the direct final rule because of
significant adverse comment, OSHA
will consider all timely comments
received in response to the direct final
rule when it continues with the
proposed rule. After carefully
considering all comments to the direct
final rule and the proposal, OSHA will
decide whether to publish a new final
rule. OSHA determined that the subject
of this rulemaking is suitable for direct
final rulemaking. OSHA originally
included the digger-derrick exemption
in the proposed Cranes and Derricks in
Construction standard as a result of
negotiated rulemaking involving
stakeholders from many affected sectors.
The existing rule for Cranes and
Derricks in Construction, subpart CC of
29 CFR 1926, exempts the majority of
digger derricks used in the
telecommunications and electric-utility
industries from the requirements of that
subpart. Because the revision specified
in this direct final rule extends the
exemption to a small number of digger
derricks used in the electric-utility
industry, and does not impose any new
costs or duties, OSHA does not expect
objections from the public to this
rulemaking action.
III. Discussion of the Digger-Derrick
Exemption in 29 CFR 1926, Subpart CC
A. Background of the Digger-Derrick
Exemption
A ‘‘digger derrick’’ or ‘‘radial boom
derrick’’ is a specialized type of
equipment designed to install utility
poles. A digger derrick typically is
equipped with augers to drill holes for
the poles and with a hydraulic boom to
lift the poles and set them in the holes.
Employers also use the booms to lift
objects other than poles; accordingly,
electric utilities, telecommunication
companies, and their contractors use
booms both to place objects on utility
poles and for general lifting purposes at
worksites (Docket ID OSHA–2007–
0066–0139.1). When OSHA
promulgated subpart V (Power
Transmission and Distribution) in 1972,
it excluded digger derricks from certain
requirements of 29 CFR 1926, subpart N,
the predecessor to the current 29 CFR
1926, subpart CC, standard.
OSHA developed the proposed
standard for cranes and derricks in
construction through a negotiated
rulemaking involving stakeholders from
many affected sectors. The proposed
standard included a limited exemption
for digger derricks (73 FR 59714, 59916
(Oct. 9, 2008)). After the publication of
the proposed rule, OSHA received many
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comments criticizing the scope of the
exemption because the scope applied to
digger derricks designed for the electricutility industry, and then only when
used to dig holes for utility work.
Commenters noted that customary use
of the digger derrick also involved
placing a pole in the hole and attaching
transformers and other items to the pole.
Commenters complained that the
exemption would be largely
meaningless unless it also encompassed
these functions. Several representatives
of the telecommunications industry
noted that the industry used digger
derricks routinely for similar purposes,
and requested that OSHA expand the
digger-derrick exemption to encompass
telecommunications work in addition to
electric-utility work (Docket ID OSHA–
2007–0066–0234 and OSHA–2007–
0066–0129.1).
When OSHA issued the final Cranes
and Derricks in Construction rule, it
noted concerns about the scope of the
exemption, and broadened the scope of
the exemption (see 75 FR 47906, 47924–
47926, and 48136 (Aug. 9, 2010)).
Current subpart CC, therefore, exempts
digger derricks used by both the
electric-utility and the
telecommunications industries, and
encompasses all pole work in these
industries, including placing utility
poles in the ground and attaching
transformers and other equipment to the
poles (see 29 CFR 1400(c)(4)). In that
exemption, OSHA clarifies that digger
derricks in construction that are exempt
from subpart CC must still comply with
the applicable worker protections in the
OSHA standards governing electricutility and telecommunications work at
§§ 1910.268 and 1910.269. The existing
exemption in § 1926.1400(c) states that
the subpart does not cover digger
derricks when used for augering holes
for poles carrying electric and
telecommunication lines, placing and
removing the poles, and for handling
associated materials to be installed on or
removed from the poles. Digger derricks
used in work subject to 29 CFR part
1926, subpart V, must comply with 29
CFR 1910.269. Digger derricks used in
construction work for
telecommunication service (as defined
at 29 CFR 1910.268(s)(40)) must comply
with 29 CFR 1910.268.
When the activities are exempt from
subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926, they must
still comply with all other applicable
construction standards, such as 29 CFR
1926, subpart O (Motor Vehicles,
Mechanized Equipment, and Marine
Operations), and subpart V.1
1 For telecommunications work, compliance with
the provisions of § 1910.268 is a condition of the
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On October 6, 2010, Edison Electrical
Institute petitioned for review of the
Cranes and Derricks in Construction
standard in the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia. During
subsequent discussions with OSHA, EEI
provided new information to OSHA
regarding the use of digger derricks in
the electric-utility industry and the
resulting impact on the utilities’
operations under the current diggerderrick exemption in subpart CC.
According to EEI, the exemption from
subpart CC covers roughly 95 percent of
work conducted by digger derricks in
the electric-utility industry (see OSHA–
2012–0025–0004 for EEI Dec. 7, 2010,
letter, page 2). The majority of the work
under the remaining five percent is
work that is closely related to the
exempted work. Id. For example, when
electric utilities use digger derricks to
perform construction work involving
pole installations, the same diggerderrick crew that performs the pole
work typically installs pad-mount
transformers on the ground as part of
the same power system as the poles.
While the pole work is exempt under 29
CFR 1926.1400(c)(4), the placement of
the pad-mount transformer on the
ground is not.
Furthermore, in comparison to
currently exempted pole work, OSHA
believes most (if not all) of the
remaining five percent of work is at
least as safe. Weight measurements
provided by EEI demonstrate that
transformers placed on a pad on the
ground are roughly the same weight as,
or in some cases lighter than, the weight
of the transformers lifted onto the poles,
or the poles themselves (see OSHA–
2012–0025–0003 for EEI handout,
‘‘Typical Weights’’ chart).2 In addition,
exemption in § 1926.400(c)(4). The scope
limitations in § 1910.268(a) (such as the language
stating that it does not apply to construction) are
irrelevant to application of the exemption. If an
employer uses a digger derrick for
telecommunications construction work and does
not comply with the provisions in § 1910.268, then
that employer fails to qualify for the exemption in
§ 1926.400(c)(4). As a result, that employer must
comply with all of the requirements in subpart CC
of part 1926, including the operator-certification
requirements in § 1926.1427. If the employer fails
to comply with subpart CC, and cannot demonstrate
that it complied with § 1910.268 for
telecommunications work, or § 1910.269 for
electric-utility work, then OSHA will cite the
employer under subpart CC (not § 1910.268 or
§ 1910.269). If the employer demonstrates that it
complies with the exemption in subpart CC, but
does not comply with the separate requirements in
subpart O applicable to all motorized vehicles in
construction, then OSHA will cite the employer
under subpart O. Note that this explanation does
not suggest that OSHA is restricting its enforcement
discretion on whether to issue citations at all.
2 EEI’s chart does not show weights for concrete
and plastic transformer pads, and EEI did not
indicate that utilities use digger derricks to place
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electric utilities typically place
distribution transformers in a right of
way along front property lines, close to
a roadway, or along rear property lines,
irrespective of whether the transformers
are pole- or pad-mounted. In those
cases, the lifting radius of a digger
derrick placing a transformer on a pad
is similar to the lifting radius of a digger
derrick placing a transformer on a pole.
Consequently, the lifting forces on a
digger derrick should be approximately
the same regardless of whether the
transformer is pole- or pad-mounted
(see, e.g., OSHA–2012–0025–0003).
Finally, the approximate height of the
transformer relative to the employee
installing the transformer is the same for
the two types of transformers. An
employee installing a pad-mounted
transformer is on the ground, near the
pad, whereas an employee installing a
pole-mounted transformer is either on
the pole, or in an aerial lift, near the
mounting point for the transformer. In
either case, the transformer would be
around the same height as the
employee.
Because the same workers generally
perform both types of work, utility
employers must, when the standard
becomes fully effective in November
2014, incur the cost of meeting all other
requirements in subpart CC, including
the operator-certification requirements,
for those workers to perform the five
percent of the work not currently
exempted. The result could be a sizable
cost (about $21.6 million annually) for
an activity that does not appear
significantly more dangerous than the
type of activity that OSHA already
exempted. (See Section IV.B. (Final
Economic Analysis and Final
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis) in
this preamble for a summary of these
costs.) OSHA did not consider this
result when it promulgated the
standard.
OSHA acknowledges the arguments
that there are minimal safety benefits
attributable to imposing the standard’s
requirements on the remaining five
percent of non-exempted work;
moreover, the exempted digger-derrick
operations are still subject to the
protections afforded to workers by
OSHA’s electric-utility and
telecommunications standards
(§ 1910.269, subpart V of 29 CFR 1926,
and § 1910.268, respectively). OSHA
those pads. If utilities do use digger derricks to lift
pads, EEI’s presentation indicates that digger
derricks lift the transformers separately. Because
the surface area of these pads is comparable to the
transformers on them, and because these pads are
generally only a few hundred millimeters thick,
OSHA does not believe that the pads weigh any
more than transformers or poles.
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also notes that the largest labor
organization for workers in the electricutility industry, the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers,
participated in settlement discussions,
corroborated the general validity of the
information provided by EEI, and
actively supported EEI’s request for an
expanded digger-derrick exemption. In
light of these factors, OSHA is removing
the burdens on employers for the
remaining five percent of non-exempted
work, and revising the digger-derrick
exemption to include all digger derricks
used in construction work subject to 29
CFR 1926, subpart V. Based on its
estimates in the Final Economic
Analysis in the 2010 final rule, the
Agency determined that expanding the
exemption for digger derricks will
enable employers in NAICS 221120 to
avoid compliance costs of about $15.9
million per year, while employers in
NAICS 221110 will avoid about $5.7
million per year, for a total cost savings
of about $21.6 million annually.
When the Agency promulgated the
final Cranes and Derricks in
Construction rule, OSHA’s primary
concern about extending the diggerderrick exemption beyond pole work
was that such an extension would
provide employers with an incentive to
use digger derricks on construction sites
to perform construction tasks normally
handled by cranes—tasks that are
beyond the original design capabilities
of a digger derrick. In discussing this
concern, OSHA stated, ‘‘[T]he general
lifting work done at those other
worksites would be subject to this
standard if done by other types of lifting
equipment, and the same standards
should apply as apply to that equipment
* * *.’’ (75 FR 47925). OSHA
acknowledges that revising the
exemption would extend the diggerderrick exemption to include some work
at substations. However, EEI indicated
that the employers in the electric-utility
industry limit such uses to assembly or
arrangement of substation components,
and that these employers use other
types of cranes instead of digger
derricks to perform lifting and
installation work at substations (see
OSHA–2012–0025–0005 for Jan. 2011
EEI letter). If OSHA finds that, should
this direct final rule become a final rule,
employers are using digger derricks
increasingly for other tasks, the Agency
may revisit this issue and adjust the
exemption accordingly. The Agency
also recognizes that, because the
exemption only applies to work subject
to the electrical-power and
telecommunications standards,
employers cannot use digger derricks
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within this exemption to perform
unrelated tasks such as the construction
of a building or the foundation or
structural components of a substation
before the installation of electric powertransmission or power-distribution
equipment. A digger derrick used for
this type of construction will still be
subject to the requirements in 29 CFR
1926, subpart CC, and operators will
have to be certified in accordance with
§ 1926.1427.
B. Changes to the Text of the Exemption
in 29 CFR 1926.1400(c)(4)
OSHA is revising the exemption in 29
CFR 1926.1400(c)(4) to include within
the exemption ‘‘any other work subject
to subpart V of 29 CFR part 1926.’’ This
revision expands the exemption to
remove from coverage under subpart CC
of 29 CFR 1926 the types of non-pole,
digger-derrick work described by EEI.
OSHA is not expanding the exemption
for pole work performed by employers
in the telecommunications industry
because no party raised or requested
such an exemption in the litigation;
therefore, this issue is outside the scope
of this rulemaking.
The Agency also is making several
minor clarifications to the text of the
exemption. First, OSHA is making a
minor grammatical clarification by
replacing ‘‘and’’ with ‘‘or’’ in the phrase
‘‘poles carrying electric or
telecommunication lines’’ (emphasis
added). This revision will ensure that
the regulated community does not
misconstrue the exemption as limited to
poles that carry both electric and
telecommunications lines. This
clarification is consistent with OSHA’s
explanation in the preamble of the
Cranes and Derricks in Construction
final rule (see 75 FR 47925).
Second, OSHA is adding the phrase
‘‘to be eligible for this exclusion’’ at the
beginning of the sentence requiring
compliance with § 1910.268 and subpart
V of 29 CFR 1926, respectively. This
revision limits the exemption to the use
of digger derricks that comply with the
requirements in subpart V or § 1910.268;
if an employer uses a digger derrick for
subpart V or telecommunications work
without complying with all of the
requirements in subpart V or § 1910.268,
then the work is not exempt, and the
employer must comply with all of the
requirements of subpart CC of 29 CFR
1926. This clarification is consistent
with OSHA’s explanation of the
exemption in the preamble of the final
rule (see 75 FR 47925–47926).
Third, OSHA is replacing the
reference to § 1910.269 with a reference
to 29 CFR 1926, subpart V. The current
exemption in § 1926.1400(c)(4) requires
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employers using digger derricks for
work covered by subpart V to comply
with the requirements in § 1910.269.
However, in the 2010 final rule for
Cranes and Derricks in Construction,
OSHA also revised 29 CFR
1926.952(c)(2) of subpart V to require
digger derricks used for the purposes
exempted from subpart CC to comply
with § 1910.269. Thus, although the
revised exemption in this direct final
rule specifies compliance with subpart
V instead of § 1910.269, there is no
substantive revision to digger derricks
used for augering holes and handling
associated materials. The primary
purpose for this revision is to harmonize
the § 1926.1400(c)(4) exemption with 29
CFR 1926.952(c)(2) to ensure that nonpole digger-derrick work covered by
subpart V receives the same protections
as pole work covered by subpart V.
C. Discussion of Conforming Revisions
to 29 CFR 1926, Subpart V
As part of this harmonizing process,
OSHA also is revising the corresponding
provision in subpart V that requires
compliance with § 1910.269 for all
digger-derrick work exempted from
subpart CC, including §§ 1910.269(p)
(Mechanical equipment), 1910.269(a)(2)
(Training), and 1910.269(l) (Working on
or near exposed energized parts) (see
new 29 CFR 1926.952(c)(2)). When
OSHA promulgated subpart CC of 29
CFR 1926 in 2010, the Agency also
revised § 1926.952(c)(2) in subpart V of
its construction standards (75 FR
48135). The revision mirrored the
terminology in the digger-derrick
exemption in § 1926.1400(c)(4), and
required employers using digger
derricks so exempted to comply with
§ 1910.269 (Electric power generation,
transmission, and distribution). In
making this revision, the Agency noted
that it added specific minimum
clearance-distance requirements, which
are applicable to subpart V work, to the
cranes and derricks in construction
rules at subpart CC, and explained that
it revised § 1926.952(c) to require digger
derricks to comply with § 1910.269 to
provide ‘‘comparable safety
requirements’’ (75 FR 47921).
As revised, paragraph § 1926.952(c)(2)
requires employers using digger derricks
for subpart V work and, thus, not
subject to the requirements of subpart
CC of 29 CFR 1926, to comply with the
requirements in § 1910.269. OHSA also
is clarifying that paragraph (c)(2) applies
in addition to, not in place of, the
general requirement in § 1926.952(c)
that all equipment (including digger
derricks) must comply with subpart O of
29 CFR 1926. As noted in the preamble
to the subpart CC final rule, OSHA
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currently is developing a rule that will
amend subpart V to avoid
inconsistencies between subpart V of
the construction standards and
§ 1910.269 (see 70 FR 34822 (June 15,
2005)). Pending completion of that
rulemaking, digger derricks excluded
from subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926 will be
subject to the same requirements
regardless of whether employers use
them for work covered by subpart V or
work covered by § 1910.269, and
regardless of whether employers use
them for pole work or other subpart V
work.
IV. Agency Determinations
A. Significant Risk
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The purpose of the Occupational
Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSH Act;
29 U.S.C. 651 et al.) is ‘‘to assure so far
as possible every working man and
woman in the Nation safe and healthful
working conditions and to preserve our
human resources’’ (29 U.S.C. 651(b)). To
achieve this goal, Congress authorized
the Secretary of Labor to promulgate
and enforce occupational safety and
health standards (29 U.S.C. 654(b),
655(b)). An occupational safety or
health standard is a standard that
‘‘requires conditions, or the adoption or
use of one or more practices, means,
methods, operations, or processes,
reasonably necessary or appropriate to
provide safe or healthful employment
and places of employment’’ (29 U.S.C.
652(8)). A standard is reasonably
necessary or appropriate within the
meaning of Section 652(8) if it
substantially reduces or eliminates
significant risk (see Industrial Union
Department, AFL–CIO v. American
Petroleum Institute, 448 U.S. 607
(1980)).
This direct final rule does not impose
any additional requirements on
employers. Because OSHA previously
determined that the Cranes and Derricks
in Construction standard substantially
reduces a significant risk (see 75 FR
47913), it is unnecessary for the Agency
to make additional findings on risk for
the purposes of this minor amendment
to the digger-derrick exemption (see,
e.g., Public Citizen Health Research
Group v. Tyson, 796 F.2d 1479, 1502
n.16 (DC Cir. 1986) (rejecting the
argument that OSHA must ‘‘find that
each and every aspect of its standard
eliminates a significant risk’’).
B. Final Economic Analysis and Final
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
When it issued the final rule for
Cranes and Derricks in Construction,
OSHA prepared a Final Economic
Analysis (FEA) as required by the
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13:51 Nov 08, 2012
Jkt 229001
Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970 (‘‘OSH Act’’; 29 U.S.C. 651 et seq.)
and Executive Orders 12866 and 13563.
OSHA also published a final regulatory
flexibility analysis as required by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601–612).
In the FEA for the final rule (OSHA–
2007–0066–0422), the Agency estimated
that there were about 10,000 crane
operators in NAICS 221110 Electric
Power Generation, and about 20,000
crane operators in NAICS 221120
Electric Power Transmission, Control,
and Distribution. OSHA based these
figures on estimates of the number of
construction work crews in these
industries from its subpart V FEA, with
an allowance (to assure maximum
flexibility) that there be three trained
crane operators for every work crew.
Based on submissions to the record,
OSHA estimated that 85 percent of these
30,000 operators (25,500) worked on
digger derricks, while 15 percent of the
operators operated truck-mounted
cranes, or boom trucks; therefore, a total
of 25,500 digger-derrick operators
would require operator certification.
In its FEA for the final rule, OSHA
estimated that the total costs for NAICS
221110 would be $6.7 million ($4
million for operator certification), and
the total costs for NAICS 221120 would
be $18.7 million annually ($8.7 million
for operator certification) (see FEA
Table B–9 in the Aug. 9, 2010, FR
notice). Fully exempting digger derricks
from the scope of the standard also
eliminates costs for other activities
besides operator certification, such as
inspections and power-line safety. In
the original FEA, the two main cost
components for an industry were the
number of crane operators and the
number of jobs involving cranes. The
original FEA estimated that digger
derricks represented 85 percent of
operators, and 85 percent of jobs
involving cranes. OSHA, therefore,
estimates that digger derricks account
for 85 percent of the costs attributed to
NAICS 221110 and NAICS 221120.
Applying this 85 percent factor to the
total costs for the industries yields costs
for digger derricks of $5.7 million per
year in NAICS 221110 and $15.9 million
per year in NAICS 221120, for a total of
$21.6 million per year.3
3 Based on the size of digger derricks and EEI’s
descriptions of digger-derrick activities, OSHA
understands that the vast majority of digger-derrick
use for construction activity in the electric-utility
industry will involve transmission and distribution
work subject to subpart V of 29 CFR 1926.
Employers categorized under NAICS 221120
generally conduct electric-transmission and
-distribution work. However, OSHA is including
digger derricks under NAICS 221110, which is the
SIC code for power generation, because some
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This direct final rule will eliminate
nearly all of the estimated $21.6 million
per year in costs associated with digger
derricks. These estimated cost savings
may be slightly overstated because
OSHA noted in its FEA that the cost
assumptions might not represent the
most efficient way to meet the
requirements of the rule. However,
OSHA wanted to assure the regulated
community that, even with somewhat
overstated cost estimates, the rule
would still be economically feasible.
In its original FEA (OSHA–2007–
0066–0422), OSHA reported an average
of 0.5 crane-related fatalities per year in
SIC codes NAICS 221110 and NAICS
221120. However, the original FEA did
not indicate that any of these fatalities
involved digger derricks or other
equipment covered by the standard.
Moreover, in light of the information
provided by EEI, there is no indication
that the additional five percent of
digger-derrick activity exempted
through this rulemaking poses any
hazard greater than the hazard posed by
the digger-derrick activities OSHA
already exempted in the 2010 final rule.
Because this direct final rule
estimates cost savings of $21.6 million
per year, this direct final rule is not
economically significant within the
meaning of Executive Order 12866 (58
FR 51735). The rule does not impose
additional costs on any private-sector or
public-sector entity, and does not meet
any of the criteria for an economically
significant or major rule specified by
Executive Order 12866 and the relevant
statutes. This rule is not a ‘‘major rule’’
under Section 804 of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.).
OSHA developed this direct final rule
consistent with the provisions of
Executive Orders 12866 and 13563.
Accordingly, this direct final rule
follows closely the principle of EO
13563 that agencies should use new
data developed after completion of a
rulemaking (retrospective analysis) to
determine if a regulation ‘‘should be
modified, streamlined, expanded, or
repealed.’’ In this case, review of data
submitted after completion of the initial
rulemaking provided OSHA with the
opportunity to streamline a rule by
dropping its application to digger
derricks, thereby saving the industry an
estimated $21.6 million per year. As
employers may be under that SIC code because
their primary work is in that area, but those
employers also may engage in transmission work
covered by subpart V. Because the record does not
indicate that employers use digger derricks for
power-generation construction activities, OSHA
assumes that the use of digger derricks under
NAICS 221110 is for subpart V work.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 218 / Friday, November 9, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
described previously, this action
removes duties and costs for the
electric-utility industry, and does not
impose any new duties on any
employer. Because small entities will
have reduced costs as a result of this
direct final rule, the Agency certifies
that the final standard would not
impose significant economic costs on a
substantial number of small entities.
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C. Technological Feasibility
A standard is technologically feasible
when the protective measures it requires
already exist, when available technology
can bring the protective measures into
existence, or when that technology is
reasonably likely to develop (see
American Textile Mfrs. Institute v.
OSHA, 452 U.S. 490, 513 (1981) (ATMI);
American Iron and Steel Institute v.
OSHA, 939 F.2d 975, 980 (DC Cir. 1991)
(AISI)). This direct final rule does not
require any additional protective
measures. In the original FEA, OSHA
found the standard to be technologically
feasible (75 FR 48079). OSHA concludes
that this revision is feasible as well
because it reduces or removes current
requirements on employers.
D. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
When OSHA issued the final rule on
August 9, 2010, the Agency submitted
an Information Collection Request (ICR)
to OMB titled Cranes and Derricks in
Construction (29 CFR Part 1926 Subpart
CC). On November 1, 2010, OMB
approved the ICR under OMB Control
Number 1218–0261, with an expiration
date of November 30, 2013.
Subsequently, in December 2010, OSHA
discontinued the Cranes and Derricks
Standard for Construction (29 CFR
1926.550) ICR (OMB Control Number
1218–0113) because the new ICR
superseded this ICR. In addition, OSHA
retitled the new ICR to Cranes and
Derricks in Construction (29 CFR Part
1926, Subpart CC and Subpart DD).
This direct final rule, which expands
the digger-derrick exemption, does not
require any additional collection of
information or alter the substantive
requirements detailed in the 2010 ICR.
The only impact on the collection of
information will be a reduction in the
number of entities collecting
information. Accordingly, OSHA does
not believe it is necessary to submit a
new ICR to OMB. OSHA will identify
any reduction in burden hours when it
renews the ICR.
Interested parties may comment on
OSHA’s determination that this direct
final rule contains no additional
paperwork requirements by sending
their written comments to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
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13:51 Nov 08, 2012
Jkt 229001
Attn: OMB Desk Officer for OSHA,
Office of Management and Budget,
Room 10235, 726 Jackson Place NW.,
Washington, DC 20503. The Agency also
encourages commenters to submit their
comments on this paperwork
determination to OSHA, along with
their other comments on this direct final
rule, within the specified comment
period.
OSHA notes that a federal agency
cannot conduct or sponsor a collection
of information unless it is approved by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and
the agency also displays a currently
valid OMB control number for the
collection of information, and that the
public need not respond to a collection
of information requirement unless the
agency displays a currently valid OMB
control number. Also, notwithstanding
any other provisions of law, no person
shall be subject to a penalty for failing
to comply with a collection of
information requirement if the
requirement does not display a
currently valid OMB control number.
E. Federalism
OSHA reviewed this direct final rule
in accordance with the Executive Order
on Federalism (Executive Order 13132
(64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999))), which
requires that Federal agencies, to the
extent possible, refrain from limiting
state policy options, consult with states
prior to taking any actions that would
restrict state policy options, and take
such actions only when clear
constitutional authority exists and the
problem is national in scope. Executive
Order 13132 provides for preemption of
state law only with the expressed
consent of Congress. Federal agencies
must limit any such preemption to the
extent possible.
Under Section 18 of the OSH Act,
Congress expressly provides that states
may adopt, with federal approval, a plan
for the development and enforcement of
occupational safety and health
standards. The OSH Act refers to states
that obtain federal approval for such a
plan as ‘‘State Plan States’’ (29 U.S.C.
667). Occupational safety and health
standards developed by State Plan
States must be at least as effective in
providing safe and healthful
employment and places of employment
as the federal standards. Subject to these
requirements, State Plan States are free
to develop and enforce under state law
their own requirements for safety and
health standards.
OSHA previously concluded that its
promulgation of subpart CC complies
with Executive Order 13132 (75 FR
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Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
67275
48128 and 48129). Because the current
rulemaking does not impose any
additional burdens, that analysis applies
to the revision of the digger-derrick
exemption. Therefore, this direct final
rule complies with Executive Order
13132. In states without OSHAapproved state plans, any standard
developed from this direct final rule
would impact state policy options in the
same manner as every standard
promulgated by OSHA. In states with
OSHA-approved state plans, this
rulemaking does not limit state policy
options.
F. State Plan States
When federal OSHA promulgates a
new standard or more stringent
amendment to an existing standard, the
27 states and U.S. territories with their
own OSHA-approved occupational
safety and health plans must amend
their standards to reflect the new
standard or amendment, or show OSHA
why such action is unnecessary, e.g.,
because an existing state standard
covering this area is at least as effective
in protecting employees as the new
federal standard or amendment (29 CFR
1953.5(a)). The state standard must be at
least as effective in protecting
employees as the final federal rule. State
Plan States must issue the standard
within six months of the promulgation
date of the final federal rule. When
OSHA promulgates a new standard or
amendment that does not impose
additional or more stringent
requirements than an existing standard,
State Plan States are not required to
amend their standards, although OSHA
may encourage them to do so.
The 27 states and U.S. territories with
OSHA-approved occupational safety
and health plans are: Alaska, Arizona,
California, Hawaii, Indiana, Iowa,
Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan,
Minnesota, Nevada, New Mexico, North
Carolina, Oregon, Puerto Rico, South
Carolina, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont,
Virginia, Washington, and Wyoming.
Connecticut, Illinois, New Jersey, New
York, and the Virgin Islands have
OSHA-approved State Plans that apply
to state and local government employees
only.
The amendments made in this direct
final rule do not impose any new
requirements on employers.
Accordingly, State Plan States are not
required to amend their standards to
incorporate the expanded exemption
specified in this direct final rule, but
they may do so if they so choose.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
When OSHA issued the final rule for
Cranes and Derricks in Construction (75
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 218 / Friday, November 9, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
FR 48130), it reviewed the rule
according to the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA; 2 U.S.C.
1501 et seq.) and Executive Order 13132
(64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999)), and
concluded that the final rule did not
meet the definition of a ‘‘Federal
intergovernmental mandate’’ under the
UMRA. OSHA’s standards do not apply
to state or local governments except in
states that have voluntarily adopted
state plans. OSHA further noted that the
rule imposed costs of over $100 million
per year on the private sector and,
therefore, required review under the
UMRA for those costs; the Agency
determined that its Final Economic
Analysis met that requirement. Id.
As discussed above in Section IV.B.
(Final Economic Analysis and Final
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis) of
this preamble, this direct final rule
reduces expenditures by private-sector
employers. For the purposes of the
UMRA, OSHA certifies that this direct
final rule does not mandate that state,
local, or tribal governments adopt new,
unfunded regulatory obligations, or
increase expenditures by the private
sector of more than $100 million in any
year.
H. Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
OSHA reviewed this direct final rule
in accordance with Executive Order
13175 (65 FR 67249 (Nov. 9, 2000)), and
determined that it does not have ‘‘tribal
implications’’ as defined in that order.
This direct final rule does not have
substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the federal government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
federal government and Indian tribes.
wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with
16:48 Nov 08, 2012
Jkt 229001
PART 1926—[AMENDED]
31 CFR Part 552
Subpart V—Power Transmission and
Distribution.
Yemen Sanctions Regulations
1. Revise the authority citation for
subpart V to read as follows:
■
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 3701; 29 U.S.C. 653,
655, 657; Secretary of Labor’s Order Nos. 12–
71 (36 FR 8754); 8–76 (41 FR 25059); 9–83
(48 FR 35736), 1–90 (55 FR 9033), 5–2007 (72
FR 31159), or 1–2012 (77 FR 3912), as
applicable. Section 1926.951 also is issued
under 29 CFR part 1911.
2. Amend § 1926.952 by revising
paragraph (c)(2) to read as follows:
■
§ 1926.952
Mechanical equipment.
*
*
*
*
*
(c). * * *
(2) Use of digger derricks must
comply with § 1910.269 (in addition to
29 CFR 1926, subpart O) whenever such
use is excluded from 29 CFR 1926,
subpart CC, in accordance with
§ 1926.1400(c)(4).
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart CC—Cranes and Derricks in
Construction.
3. Revise the authority citation for
subpart CC to read as follows:
■
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 3701; 29 U.S.C. 653,
655, 657; and Secretary of Labor’s Order No.
5–2007 (72 FR 31159) or 1–2012 (77 FR
3912), as applicable; and 29 CFR part 1911.
Scope.
*
David Michaels, Ph.D., MPH,
Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20210,
authorized the preparation of this
notice. OSHA is issuing this direct final
rule under the following authorities: 29
U.S.C. 653, 655, 657; 40 U.S.C. 3701 et
seq.; 5 U.S.C. 553; Secretary of Labor’s
Order No. 1–2012 (77 FR 3912, Jan. 25,
2012); and 29 CFR part 1911.
BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
§ 1926.1400
Authority and Signature
[FR Doc. 2012–27210 Filed 11–8–12; 8:45 am]
For the reasons stated in the preamble
of this direct final rule, OSHA is
amending 29 CFR part 1926 as follows:
4. Amend § 1926.1400 by revising
paragraph (c)(4) to read as follows:
Cranes and derricks, Construction
industry, Occupational safety and
health.
at § 1910.268(s)(40)) must comply with
all of the provisions of § 1910.268.
*
*
*
*
*
Amendments to Standards
■
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1926
VerDate Mar<15>2010
Signed at Washington, DC, on October 9,
2012.
David Michaels,
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational
Safety and Health.
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(4) Digger derricks when used for
augering holes for poles carrying electric
or telecommunication lines, placing and
removing the poles, and for handling
associated materials for installation on,
or removal from, the poles, or when
used for any other work subject to
subpart V of this part. To be eligible for
this exclusion, digger-derrick use in
work subject to subpart V of this part
must comply with all of the provisions
of that subpart, and digger-derrick use
in construction work for
telecommunication service (as defined
PO 00000
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Office of Foreign Assets Control
Office of Foreign Assets
Control, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (‘‘OFAC’’) is issuing regulations
to implement Executive Order 13611 of
May 16, 2012 (‘‘Blocking Property of
Persons Threatening the Peace, Security,
or Stability of Yemen’’). OFAC intends
to supplement this part 552 with a more
comprehensive set of regulations, which
may include additional interpretive and
definitional guidance and additional
general licenses and statements of
licensing policy.
DATES: Effective Date: November 9,
2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Assistant Director for Sanctions
Compliance & Evaluation, tel.: 202/622–
2490, Assistant Director for Licensing,
tel.: 202/622–2480, Assistant Director
for Policy, tel.: 202/622–4855, Office of
Foreign Assets Control, or Chief Counsel
(Foreign Assets Control), tel.: 202/622–
2410, Office of the General Counsel,
Department of the Treasury (not toll free
numbers).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Electronic and Facsimile Availability
This document and additional
information concerning OFAC are
available from OFAC’s Web site
(www.treasury.gov/ofac). Certain general
information pertaining to OFAC’s
sanctions programs also is available via
facsimile through a 24-hour fax-ondemand service, tel.: 202/622–0077.
Background
On May 16, 2012, the President issued
Executive Order 13611 (77 FR 29533,
May 18, 2012) (‘‘E.O. 13611’’), invoking
the authority of, inter alia, the
International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.) and
the National Emergencies Act (50 U.S.C.
1601 et seq.).
The Department of the Treasury’s
Office of Foreign Assets Control
(‘‘OFAC’’) is issuing the Yemen
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 218 (Friday, November 9, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 67270-67276]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-27210]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Occupational Safety and Health Administration
29 CFR Part 1926
[Docket ID-OSHA-2012-0025]
RIN 1218-AC75
Revising the Exemption for Digger Derricks in the Cranes and
Derricks in Construction Standard
AGENCY: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA); Labor.
ACTION: Direct final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: OSHA is broadening the exemption for digger derricks in its
standard for cranes and derricks. OSHA issued a final standard updating
the requirements for cranes and derricks on August 9, 2010, and the
Edison Electric Institute (EEI) petitioned for review of the standard
in the United States Court of Appeals. After petitioning, EEI provided
OSHA with new information regarding digger derricks. OSHA reviewed the
additional information and the rulemaking record, and decided to
broaden the exemption for digger derricks used in the electric-utility
industry by means of this direct final rule.
DATES: This direct final rule will become effective on February 7,
2013, unless OSHA receives significant adverse comment to this direct
final rule by December 10, 2012. All submissions, whether transmitted,
mailed, or delivered, must bear a postmark or provide other evidence of
the submission date.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments (including comments to the information-
collection (paperwork) determination described under the section titled
AGENCY DETERMINATIONS), hearing requests, and other information and
materials, identified by Docket No. OSHA-2012-0025, by any of the
following methods:
Electronically: Submit comments and attachments electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov, which is the Federal eRulemaking Portal.
Follow the instructions online for submitting comments.
Facsimile: OSHA allows facsimile transmission of comments that are
10 pages or fewer in length (including attachments). Fax these
documents to the OSHA Docket Office at (202) 693-1648; OSHA does not
require hard copies of these documents. Instead of transmitting
facsimile copies of attachments that supplement these documents (e.g.,
studies, journal articles), commenters must submit these attachments to
the OSHA Docket Office, Technical Data Center, Room N-2625, OSHA, U.S.
Department of Labor, 200 Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20210.
These attachments must clearly identify the sender's name, the date,
and the docket number (OSHA-2012-0025), so that the Docket Office can
attach them to the appropriate document.
Regular or express mail, hand delivery, or messenger (courier)
service: Submit comments and any additional information or material to
the OSHA Docket Office, Docket No. OSHA-2012-0025 or RIN No. 1218-AC75,
Technical Data Center, Room N-2625, OSHA, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20210; telephone: (202) 693-
2350. (OSHA's TTY number is (877) 889-5627.) Contact the OSHA Docket
Office for information about security procedures concerning delivery of
materials by express mail, hand delivery, and messenger service. The
Docket Office will accept deliveries (express mail, hand delivery, and
messenger service) during the Docket Office's normal business hours,
8:15 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. ET.
Docket: To read or download comments or other information or
material in the docket, go to https://www.regulations.gov or to the OSHA
Docket Office at the address above. Documents in the docket are listed
in the https://www.regulations.gov index; however, some information
(e.g., copyrighted material) is not available publicly to read or
download through this Web site. All submissions, including copyrighted
material, are available for inspection at the OSHA Docket Office.
Contact the OSHA Docket Office for assistance in locating docket
submissions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: General information and press
inquiries: Mr. Frank Meilinger, Director, OSHA Office of
Communications, Room N-3647, U.S. Department of Labor, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington,
[[Page 67271]]
DC 20210; telephone: (202) 693-1999; email: meilinger.francis2@dol.gov.
Technical inquiries: Mr. Garvin Branch, Directorate of
Construction, Room N-3468, OSHA, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20210; telephone: (202) 693-
2020; fax: (202) 693-1689; email: branch.garvin@dol.gov.
For copies of this Federal Register notice, news releases, and
other relevant document: Electronic copies of these documents are
available at OSHA's Web page at https://www.osha.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Request for Comment
II. Direct Final Rulemaking
III. Discussion of the Digger-Derrick Exemption in 29 CFR 1926,
Subpart CC
A. Background
B. Changes to the Text of the Exemption in 29 CFR
1926.1400(c)(4)
C. Discussion of Conforming Revisions to 29 CFR 1926, Subpart V
(Power Transmission and Distribution)
IV. Agency Determinations
A. Significant Risk
B. Final Economic Analysis and Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis
C. Technological Feasibility
D. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
E. Federalism
F. State Plan States
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
H. Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1926
Authority and Signature
Amendments to Standards
I. Request for Comment
OSHA requests comments on all issues related to this direct final
rule, including economic, paperwork, or other regulatory impacts of
this rule on the regulated community. If OSHA receives no significant
adverse comment, OSHA will publish a Federal Register document
confirming the effective date of this direct final rule and withdrawing
the companion proposed rule published in the ``Proposed Rules'' section
of today's Federal Register. Such confirmation may include minor
stylistic or technical changes to the document. For the purpose of
judicial review, OSHA views the date of confirmation of the effective
date of this direct final rule as the date of promulgation.
II. Direct Final Rulemaking
In direct final rulemaking, an agency publishes a direct final rule
in the Federal Register with a statement that the rule will go into
effect unless the agency receives significant adverse comment within a
specified period. The agency may publish an identical proposed rule at
the same time. If the agency receives no significant adverse comment in
response to the direct final rule, the rule goes into effect. OSHA
typically confirms the effective date of a direct final rule through a
separate Federal Register notice. If the agency receives a significant
adverse comment, the agency withdraws the direct final rule and treats
such comment as a response to the proposed rule. An agency typically
uses direct final rulemaking when an agency anticipates that a rule
will not be controversial.
For purposes of this direct final rule, a significant adverse
comment is one that explains why the amendments to OSHA's digger-
derrick exemption would be inappropriate. In determining whether a
comment necessitates withdrawal of the direct final rule, OSHA will
consider whether the comment raises an issue serious enough to warrant
a substantive response in a notice-and-comment process. OSHA will not
consider a comment recommending an additional amendment to be a
significant adverse comment unless the comment states why the direct
final rule would be ineffective without the addition. Furthermore, OSHA
will not consider a comment requesting any narrowing of the existing
digger-derrick exemption to be a significant adverse comment because
narrowing the existing exemption is beyond the scope of this
rulemaking. Moreover, a comment requesting an expansion of the
exemption to encompass activities not related to digger-derrick use by
electric utilities also would be beyond the scope of this rulemaking,
and OSHA will not consider such a comment to be a significant adverse
comment unless the commenter explains why the provisions of the direct
final rule, as these provisions apply to digger derricks, would be
ineffective without the expansion.
In addition to publishing this direct final rule, OSHA is
publishing a companion proposed rule in the ``Proposed Rules'' section
of today's Federal Register. The comment period for the proposed rule
runs concurrently with that of the direct final rule. OSHA also will
treat comments received on the companion proposed rule as comments
regarding the direct final rule. Likewise, OSHA will consider
significant adverse comment submitted to the direct final rule as
comment to the companion proposed rule. Therefore, if OSHA receives a
significant adverse comment on either this direct final rule or the
proposed rule, it will publish a timely withdrawal of this direct final
rule and proceed with the companion proposed rule. In the event that
OSHA withdraws the direct final rule because of significant adverse
comment, OSHA will consider all timely comments received in response to
the direct final rule when it continues with the proposed rule. After
carefully considering all comments to the direct final rule and the
proposal, OSHA will decide whether to publish a new final rule. OSHA
determined that the subject of this rulemaking is suitable for direct
final rulemaking. OSHA originally included the digger-derrick exemption
in the proposed Cranes and Derricks in Construction standard as a
result of negotiated rulemaking involving stakeholders from many
affected sectors. The existing rule for Cranes and Derricks in
Construction, subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926, exempts the majority of digger
derricks used in the telecommunications and electric-utility industries
from the requirements of that subpart. Because the revision specified
in this direct final rule extends the exemption to a small number of
digger derricks used in the electric-utility industry, and does not
impose any new costs or duties, OSHA does not expect objections from
the public to this rulemaking action.
III. Discussion of the Digger-Derrick Exemption in 29 CFR 1926, Subpart
CC
A. Background of the Digger-Derrick Exemption
A ``digger derrick'' or ``radial boom derrick'' is a specialized
type of equipment designed to install utility poles. A digger derrick
typically is equipped with augers to drill holes for the poles and with
a hydraulic boom to lift the poles and set them in the holes. Employers
also use the booms to lift objects other than poles; accordingly,
electric utilities, telecommunication companies, and their contractors
use booms both to place objects on utility poles and for general
lifting purposes at worksites (Docket ID OSHA-2007-0066-0139.1). When
OSHA promulgated subpart V (Power Transmission and Distribution) in
1972, it excluded digger derricks from certain requirements of 29 CFR
1926, subpart N, the predecessor to the current 29 CFR 1926, subpart
CC, standard.
OSHA developed the proposed standard for cranes and derricks in
construction through a negotiated rulemaking involving stakeholders
from many affected sectors. The proposed standard included a limited
exemption for digger derricks (73 FR 59714, 59916 (Oct. 9, 2008)).
After the publication of the proposed rule, OSHA received many
[[Page 67272]]
comments criticizing the scope of the exemption because the scope
applied to digger derricks designed for the electric-utility industry,
and then only when used to dig holes for utility work. Commenters noted
that customary use of the digger derrick also involved placing a pole
in the hole and attaching transformers and other items to the pole.
Commenters complained that the exemption would be largely meaningless
unless it also encompassed these functions. Several representatives of
the telecommunications industry noted that the industry used digger
derricks routinely for similar purposes, and requested that OSHA expand
the digger-derrick exemption to encompass telecommunications work in
addition to electric-utility work (Docket ID OSHA-2007-0066-0234 and
OSHA-2007-0066-0129.1).
When OSHA issued the final Cranes and Derricks in Construction
rule, it noted concerns about the scope of the exemption, and broadened
the scope of the exemption (see 75 FR 47906, 47924-47926, and 48136
(Aug. 9, 2010)). Current subpart CC, therefore, exempts digger derricks
used by both the electric-utility and the telecommunications
industries, and encompasses all pole work in these industries,
including placing utility poles in the ground and attaching
transformers and other equipment to the poles (see 29 CFR 1400(c)(4)).
In that exemption, OSHA clarifies that digger derricks in construction
that are exempt from subpart CC must still comply with the applicable
worker protections in the OSHA standards governing electric-utility and
telecommunications work at Sec. Sec. 1910.268 and 1910.269. The
existing exemption in Sec. 1926.1400(c) states that the subpart does
not cover digger derricks when used for augering holes for poles
carrying electric and telecommunication lines, placing and removing the
poles, and for handling associated materials to be installed on or
removed from the poles. Digger derricks used in work subject to 29 CFR
part 1926, subpart V, must comply with 29 CFR 1910.269. Digger derricks
used in construction work for telecommunication service (as defined at
29 CFR 1910.268(s)(40)) must comply with 29 CFR 1910.268.
When the activities are exempt from subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926, they
must still comply with all other applicable construction standards,
such as 29 CFR 1926, subpart O (Motor Vehicles, Mechanized Equipment,
and Marine Operations), and subpart V.\1\
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\1\ For telecommunications work, compliance with the provisions
of Sec. 1910.268 is a condition of the exemption in Sec.
1926.400(c)(4). The scope limitations in Sec. 1910.268(a) (such as
the language stating that it does not apply to construction) are
irrelevant to application of the exemption. If an employer uses a
digger derrick for telecommunications construction work and does not
comply with the provisions in Sec. 1910.268, then that employer
fails to qualify for the exemption in Sec. 1926.400(c)(4). As a
result, that employer must comply with all of the requirements in
subpart CC of part 1926, including the operator-certification
requirements in Sec. 1926.1427. If the employer fails to comply
with subpart CC, and cannot demonstrate that it complied with Sec.
1910.268 for telecommunications work, or Sec. 1910.269 for
electric-utility work, then OSHA will cite the employer under
subpart CC (not Sec. 1910.268 or Sec. 1910.269). If the employer
demonstrates that it complies with the exemption in subpart CC, but
does not comply with the separate requirements in subpart O
applicable to all motorized vehicles in construction, then OSHA will
cite the employer under subpart O. Note that this explanation does
not suggest that OSHA is restricting its enforcement discretion on
whether to issue citations at all.
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On October 6, 2010, Edison Electrical Institute petitioned for
review of the Cranes and Derricks in Construction standard in the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. During subsequent
discussions with OSHA, EEI provided new information to OSHA regarding
the use of digger derricks in the electric-utility industry and the
resulting impact on the utilities' operations under the current digger-
derrick exemption in subpart CC. According to EEI, the exemption from
subpart CC covers roughly 95 percent of work conducted by digger
derricks in the electric-utility industry (see OSHA-2012-0025-0004 for
EEI Dec. 7, 2010, letter, page 2). The majority of the work under the
remaining five percent is work that is closely related to the exempted
work. Id. For example, when electric utilities use digger derricks to
perform construction work involving pole installations, the same
digger-derrick crew that performs the pole work typically installs pad-
mount transformers on the ground as part of the same power system as
the poles. While the pole work is exempt under 29 CFR 1926.1400(c)(4),
the placement of the pad-mount transformer on the ground is not.
Furthermore, in comparison to currently exempted pole work, OSHA
believes most (if not all) of the remaining five percent of work is at
least as safe. Weight measurements provided by EEI demonstrate that
transformers placed on a pad on the ground are roughly the same weight
as, or in some cases lighter than, the weight of the transformers
lifted onto the poles, or the poles themselves (see OSHA-2012-0025-0003
for EEI handout, ``Typical Weights'' chart).\2\ In addition, electric
utilities typically place distribution transformers in a right of way
along front property lines, close to a roadway, or along rear property
lines, irrespective of whether the transformers are pole- or pad-
mounted. In those cases, the lifting radius of a digger derrick placing
a transformer on a pad is similar to the lifting radius of a digger
derrick placing a transformer on a pole. Consequently, the lifting
forces on a digger derrick should be approximately the same regardless
of whether the transformer is pole- or pad-mounted (see, e.g., OSHA-
2012-0025-0003). Finally, the approximate height of the transformer
relative to the employee installing the transformer is the same for the
two types of transformers. An employee installing a pad-mounted
transformer is on the ground, near the pad, whereas an employee
installing a pole-mounted transformer is either on the pole, or in an
aerial lift, near the mounting point for the transformer. In either
case, the transformer would be around the same height as the employee.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ EEI's chart does not show weights for concrete and plastic
transformer pads, and EEI did not indicate that utilities use digger
derricks to place those pads. If utilities do use digger derricks to
lift pads, EEI's presentation indicates that digger derricks lift
the transformers separately. Because the surface area of these pads
is comparable to the transformers on them, and because these pads
are generally only a few hundred millimeters thick, OSHA does not
believe that the pads weigh any more than transformers or poles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the same workers generally perform both types of work,
utility employers must, when the standard becomes fully effective in
November 2014, incur the cost of meeting all other requirements in
subpart CC, including the operator-certification requirements, for
those workers to perform the five percent of the work not currently
exempted. The result could be a sizable cost (about $21.6 million
annually) for an activity that does not appear significantly more
dangerous than the type of activity that OSHA already exempted. (See
Section IV.B. (Final Economic Analysis and Final Regulatory Flexibility
Act Analysis) in this preamble for a summary of these costs.) OSHA did
not consider this result when it promulgated the standard.
OSHA acknowledges the arguments that there are minimal safety
benefits attributable to imposing the standard's requirements on the
remaining five percent of non-exempted work; moreover, the exempted
digger-derrick operations are still subject to the protections afforded
to workers by OSHA's electric-utility and telecommunications standards
(Sec. 1910.269, subpart V of 29 CFR 1926, and Sec. 1910.268,
respectively). OSHA
[[Page 67273]]
also notes that the largest labor organization for workers in the
electric-utility industry, the International Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers, participated in settlement discussions, corroborated the
general validity of the information provided by EEI, and actively
supported EEI's request for an expanded digger-derrick exemption. In
light of these factors, OSHA is removing the burdens on employers for
the remaining five percent of non-exempted work, and revising the
digger-derrick exemption to include all digger derricks used in
construction work subject to 29 CFR 1926, subpart V. Based on its
estimates in the Final Economic Analysis in the 2010 final rule, the
Agency determined that expanding the exemption for digger derricks will
enable employers in NAICS 221120 to avoid compliance costs of about
$15.9 million per year, while employers in NAICS 221110 will avoid
about $5.7 million per year, for a total cost savings of about $21.6
million annually.
When the Agency promulgated the final Cranes and Derricks in
Construction rule, OSHA's primary concern about extending the digger-
derrick exemption beyond pole work was that such an extension would
provide employers with an incentive to use digger derricks on
construction sites to perform construction tasks normally handled by
cranes--tasks that are beyond the original design capabilities of a
digger derrick. In discussing this concern, OSHA stated, ``[T]he
general lifting work done at those other worksites would be subject to
this standard if done by other types of lifting equipment, and the same
standards should apply as apply to that equipment * * *.'' (75 FR
47925). OSHA acknowledges that revising the exemption would extend the
digger-derrick exemption to include some work at substations. However,
EEI indicated that the employers in the electric-utility industry limit
such uses to assembly or arrangement of substation components, and that
these employers use other types of cranes instead of digger derricks to
perform lifting and installation work at substations (see OSHA-2012-
0025-0005 for Jan. 2011 EEI letter). If OSHA finds that, should this
direct final rule become a final rule, employers are using digger
derricks increasingly for other tasks, the Agency may revisit this
issue and adjust the exemption accordingly. The Agency also recognizes
that, because the exemption only applies to work subject to the
electrical-power and telecommunications standards, employers cannot use
digger derricks within this exemption to perform unrelated tasks such
as the construction of a building or the foundation or structural
components of a substation before the installation of electric power-
transmission or power-distribution equipment. A digger derrick used for
this type of construction will still be subject to the requirements in
29 CFR 1926, subpart CC, and operators will have to be certified in
accordance with Sec. 1926.1427.
B. Changes to the Text of the Exemption in 29 CFR 1926.1400(c)(4)
OSHA is revising the exemption in 29 CFR 1926.1400(c)(4) to include
within the exemption ``any other work subject to subpart V of 29 CFR
part 1926.'' This revision expands the exemption to remove from
coverage under subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926 the types of non-pole, digger-
derrick work described by EEI. OSHA is not expanding the exemption for
pole work performed by employers in the telecommunications industry
because no party raised or requested such an exemption in the
litigation; therefore, this issue is outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
The Agency also is making several minor clarifications to the text
of the exemption. First, OSHA is making a minor grammatical
clarification by replacing ``and'' with ``or'' in the phrase ``poles
carrying electric or telecommunication lines'' (emphasis added). This
revision will ensure that the regulated community does not misconstrue
the exemption as limited to poles that carry both electric and
telecommunications lines. This clarification is consistent with OSHA's
explanation in the preamble of the Cranes and Derricks in Construction
final rule (see 75 FR 47925).
Second, OSHA is adding the phrase ``to be eligible for this
exclusion'' at the beginning of the sentence requiring compliance with
Sec. 1910.268 and subpart V of 29 CFR 1926, respectively. This
revision limits the exemption to the use of digger derricks that comply
with the requirements in subpart V or Sec. 1910.268; if an employer
uses a digger derrick for subpart V or telecommunications work without
complying with all of the requirements in subpart V or Sec. 1910.268,
then the work is not exempt, and the employer must comply with all of
the requirements of subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926. This clarification is
consistent with OSHA's explanation of the exemption in the preamble of
the final rule (see 75 FR 47925-47926).
Third, OSHA is replacing the reference to Sec. 1910.269 with a
reference to 29 CFR 1926, subpart V. The current exemption in Sec.
1926.1400(c)(4) requires employers using digger derricks for work
covered by subpart V to comply with the requirements in Sec. 1910.269.
However, in the 2010 final rule for Cranes and Derricks in
Construction, OSHA also revised 29 CFR 1926.952(c)(2) of subpart V to
require digger derricks used for the purposes exempted from subpart CC
to comply with Sec. 1910.269. Thus, although the revised exemption in
this direct final rule specifies compliance with subpart V instead of
Sec. 1910.269, there is no substantive revision to digger derricks
used for augering holes and handling associated materials. The primary
purpose for this revision is to harmonize the Sec. 1926.1400(c)(4)
exemption with 29 CFR 1926.952(c)(2) to ensure that non-pole digger-
derrick work covered by subpart V receives the same protections as pole
work covered by subpart V.
C. Discussion of Conforming Revisions to 29 CFR 1926, Subpart V
As part of this harmonizing process, OSHA also is revising the
corresponding provision in subpart V that requires compliance with
Sec. 1910.269 for all digger-derrick work exempted from subpart CC,
including Sec. Sec. 1910.269(p) (Mechanical equipment), 1910.269(a)(2)
(Training), and 1910.269(l) (Working on or near exposed energized
parts) (see new 29 CFR 1926.952(c)(2)). When OSHA promulgated subpart
CC of 29 CFR 1926 in 2010, the Agency also revised Sec. 1926.952(c)(2)
in subpart V of its construction standards (75 FR 48135). The revision
mirrored the terminology in the digger-derrick exemption in Sec.
1926.1400(c)(4), and required employers using digger derricks so
exempted to comply with Sec. 1910.269 (Electric power generation,
transmission, and distribution). In making this revision, the Agency
noted that it added specific minimum clearance-distance requirements,
which are applicable to subpart V work, to the cranes and derricks in
construction rules at subpart CC, and explained that it revised Sec.
1926.952(c) to require digger derricks to comply with Sec. 1910.269 to
provide ``comparable safety requirements'' (75 FR 47921).
As revised, paragraph Sec. 1926.952(c)(2) requires employers using
digger derricks for subpart V work and, thus, not subject to the
requirements of subpart CC of 29 CFR 1926, to comply with the
requirements in Sec. 1910.269. OHSA also is clarifying that paragraph
(c)(2) applies in addition to, not in place of, the general requirement
in Sec. 1926.952(c) that all equipment (including digger derricks)
must comply with subpart O of 29 CFR 1926. As noted in the preamble to
the subpart CC final rule, OSHA
[[Page 67274]]
currently is developing a rule that will amend subpart V to avoid
inconsistencies between subpart V of the construction standards and
Sec. 1910.269 (see 70 FR 34822 (June 15, 2005)). Pending completion of
that rulemaking, digger derricks excluded from subpart CC of 29 CFR
1926 will be subject to the same requirements regardless of whether
employers use them for work covered by subpart V or work covered by
Sec. 1910.269, and regardless of whether employers use them for pole
work or other subpart V work.
IV. Agency Determinations
A. Significant Risk
The purpose of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSH
Act; 29 U.S.C. 651 et al.) is ``to assure so far as possible every
working man and woman in the Nation safe and healthful working
conditions and to preserve our human resources'' (29 U.S.C. 651(b)). To
achieve this goal, Congress authorized the Secretary of Labor to
promulgate and enforce occupational safety and health standards (29
U.S.C. 654(b), 655(b)). An occupational safety or health standard is a
standard that ``requires conditions, or the adoption or use of one or
more practices, means, methods, operations, or processes, reasonably
necessary or appropriate to provide safe or healthful employment and
places of employment'' (29 U.S.C. 652(8)). A standard is reasonably
necessary or appropriate within the meaning of Section 652(8) if it
substantially reduces or eliminates significant risk (see Industrial
Union Department, AFL-CIO v. American Petroleum Institute, 448 U.S. 607
(1980)).
This direct final rule does not impose any additional requirements
on employers. Because OSHA previously determined that the Cranes and
Derricks in Construction standard substantially reduces a significant
risk (see 75 FR 47913), it is unnecessary for the Agency to make
additional findings on risk for the purposes of this minor amendment to
the digger-derrick exemption (see, e.g., Public Citizen Health Research
Group v. Tyson, 796 F.2d 1479, 1502 n.16 (DC Cir. 1986) (rejecting the
argument that OSHA must ``find that each and every aspect of its
standard eliminates a significant risk'').
B. Final Economic Analysis and Final Regulatory Flexibility Act
Analysis
When it issued the final rule for Cranes and Derricks in
Construction, OSHA prepared a Final Economic Analysis (FEA) as required
by the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (``OSH Act''; 29
U.S.C. 651 et seq.) and Executive Orders 12866 and 13563. OSHA also
published a final regulatory flexibility analysis as required by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601-612).
In the FEA for the final rule (OSHA-2007-0066-0422), the Agency
estimated that there were about 10,000 crane operators in NAICS 221110
Electric Power Generation, and about 20,000 crane operators in NAICS
221120 Electric Power Transmission, Control, and Distribution. OSHA
based these figures on estimates of the number of construction work
crews in these industries from its subpart V FEA, with an allowance (to
assure maximum flexibility) that there be three trained crane operators
for every work crew. Based on submissions to the record, OSHA estimated
that 85 percent of these 30,000 operators (25,500) worked on digger
derricks, while 15 percent of the operators operated truck-mounted
cranes, or boom trucks; therefore, a total of 25,500 digger-derrick
operators would require operator certification.
In its FEA for the final rule, OSHA estimated that the total costs
for NAICS 221110 would be $6.7 million ($4 million for operator
certification), and the total costs for NAICS 221120 would be $18.7
million annually ($8.7 million for operator certification) (see FEA
Table B-9 in the Aug. 9, 2010, FR notice). Fully exempting digger
derricks from the scope of the standard also eliminates costs for other
activities besides operator certification, such as inspections and
power-line safety. In the original FEA, the two main cost components
for an industry were the number of crane operators and the number of
jobs involving cranes. The original FEA estimated that digger derricks
represented 85 percent of operators, and 85 percent of jobs involving
cranes. OSHA, therefore, estimates that digger derricks account for 85
percent of the costs attributed to NAICS 221110 and NAICS 221120.
Applying this 85 percent factor to the total costs for the industries
yields costs for digger derricks of $5.7 million per year in NAICS
221110 and $15.9 million per year in NAICS 221120, for a total of $21.6
million per year.\3\
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\3\ Based on the size of digger derricks and EEI's descriptions
of digger-derrick activities, OSHA understands that the vast
majority of digger-derrick use for construction activity in the
electric-utility industry will involve transmission and distribution
work subject to subpart V of 29 CFR 1926. Employers categorized
under NAICS 221120 generally conduct electric-transmission and -
distribution work. However, OSHA is including digger derricks under
NAICS 221110, which is the SIC code for power generation, because
some employers may be under that SIC code because their primary work
is in that area, but those employers also may engage in transmission
work covered by subpart V. Because the record does not indicate that
employers use digger derricks for power-generation construction
activities, OSHA assumes that the use of digger derricks under NAICS
221110 is for subpart V work.
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This direct final rule will eliminate nearly all of the estimated
$21.6 million per year in costs associated with digger derricks. These
estimated cost savings may be slightly overstated because OSHA noted in
its FEA that the cost assumptions might not represent the most
efficient way to meet the requirements of the rule. However, OSHA
wanted to assure the regulated community that, even with somewhat
overstated cost estimates, the rule would still be economically
feasible.
In its original FEA (OSHA-2007-0066-0422), OSHA reported an average
of 0.5 crane-related fatalities per year in SIC codes NAICS 221110 and
NAICS 221120. However, the original FEA did not indicate that any of
these fatalities involved digger derricks or other equipment covered by
the standard. Moreover, in light of the information provided by EEI,
there is no indication that the additional five percent of digger-
derrick activity exempted through this rulemaking poses any hazard
greater than the hazard posed by the digger-derrick activities OSHA
already exempted in the 2010 final rule.
Because this direct final rule estimates cost savings of $21.6
million per year, this direct final rule is not economically
significant within the meaning of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735).
The rule does not impose additional costs on any private-sector or
public-sector entity, and does not meet any of the criteria for an
economically significant or major rule specified by Executive Order
12866 and the relevant statutes. This rule is not a ``major rule''
under Section 804 of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.).
OSHA developed this direct final rule consistent with the
provisions of Executive Orders 12866 and 13563. Accordingly, this
direct final rule follows closely the principle of EO 13563 that
agencies should use new data developed after completion of a rulemaking
(retrospective analysis) to determine if a regulation ``should be
modified, streamlined, expanded, or repealed.'' In this case, review of
data submitted after completion of the initial rulemaking provided OSHA
with the opportunity to streamline a rule by dropping its application
to digger derricks, thereby saving the industry an estimated $21.6
million per year. As
[[Page 67275]]
described previously, this action removes duties and costs for the
electric-utility industry, and does not impose any new duties on any
employer. Because small entities will have reduced costs as a result of
this direct final rule, the Agency certifies that the final standard
would not impose significant economic costs on a substantial number of
small entities.
C. Technological Feasibility
A standard is technologically feasible when the protective measures
it requires already exist, when available technology can bring the
protective measures into existence, or when that technology is
reasonably likely to develop (see American Textile Mfrs. Institute v.
OSHA, 452 U.S. 490, 513 (1981) (ATMI); American Iron and Steel
Institute v. OSHA, 939 F.2d 975, 980 (DC Cir. 1991) (AISI)). This
direct final rule does not require any additional protective measures.
In the original FEA, OSHA found the standard to be technologically
feasible (75 FR 48079). OSHA concludes that this revision is feasible
as well because it reduces or removes current requirements on
employers.
D. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
When OSHA issued the final rule on August 9, 2010, the Agency
submitted an Information Collection Request (ICR) to OMB titled Cranes
and Derricks in Construction (29 CFR Part 1926 Subpart CC). On November
1, 2010, OMB approved the ICR under OMB Control Number 1218-0261, with
an expiration date of November 30, 2013. Subsequently, in December
2010, OSHA discontinued the Cranes and Derricks Standard for
Construction (29 CFR 1926.550) ICR (OMB Control Number 1218-0113)
because the new ICR superseded this ICR. In addition, OSHA retitled the
new ICR to Cranes and Derricks in Construction (29 CFR Part 1926,
Subpart CC and Subpart DD).
This direct final rule, which expands the digger-derrick exemption,
does not require any additional collection of information or alter the
substantive requirements detailed in the 2010 ICR. The only impact on
the collection of information will be a reduction in the number of
entities collecting information. Accordingly, OSHA does not believe it
is necessary to submit a new ICR to OMB. OSHA will identify any
reduction in burden hours when it renews the ICR.
Interested parties may comment on OSHA's determination that this
direct final rule contains no additional paperwork requirements by
sending their written comments to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Attn: OMB Desk Officer for OSHA, Office of
Management and Budget, Room 10235, 726 Jackson Place NW., Washington,
DC 20503. The Agency also encourages commenters to submit their
comments on this paperwork determination to OSHA, along with their
other comments on this direct final rule, within the specified comment
period.
OSHA notes that a federal agency cannot conduct or sponsor a
collection of information unless it is approved by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. and the agency also displays a currently valid
OMB control number for the collection of information, and that the
public need not respond to a collection of information requirement
unless the agency displays a currently valid OMB control number. Also,
notwithstanding any other provisions of law, no person shall be subject
to a penalty for failing to comply with a collection of information
requirement if the requirement does not display a currently valid OMB
control number.
E. Federalism
OSHA reviewed this direct final rule in accordance with the
Executive Order on Federalism (Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255 (Aug.
10, 1999))), which requires that Federal agencies, to the extent
possible, refrain from limiting state policy options, consult with
states prior to taking any actions that would restrict state policy
options, and take such actions only when clear constitutional authority
exists and the problem is national in scope. Executive Order 13132
provides for preemption of state law only with the expressed consent of
Congress. Federal agencies must limit any such preemption to the extent
possible.
Under Section 18 of the OSH Act, Congress expressly provides that
states may adopt, with federal approval, a plan for the development and
enforcement of occupational safety and health standards. The OSH Act
refers to states that obtain federal approval for such a plan as
``State Plan States'' (29 U.S.C. 667). Occupational safety and health
standards developed by State Plan States must be at least as effective
in providing safe and healthful employment and places of employment as
the federal standards. Subject to these requirements, State Plan States
are free to develop and enforce under state law their own requirements
for safety and health standards.
OSHA previously concluded that its promulgation of subpart CC
complies with Executive Order 13132 (75 FR 48128 and 48129). Because
the current rulemaking does not impose any additional burdens, that
analysis applies to the revision of the digger-derrick exemption.
Therefore, this direct final rule complies with Executive Order 13132.
In states without OSHA-approved state plans, any standard developed
from this direct final rule would impact state policy options in the
same manner as every standard promulgated by OSHA. In states with OSHA-
approved state plans, this rulemaking does not limit state policy
options.
F. State Plan States
When federal OSHA promulgates a new standard or more stringent
amendment to an existing standard, the 27 states and U.S. territories
with their own OSHA-approved occupational safety and health plans must
amend their standards to reflect the new standard or amendment, or show
OSHA why such action is unnecessary, e.g., because an existing state
standard covering this area is at least as effective in protecting
employees as the new federal standard or amendment (29 CFR 1953.5(a)).
The state standard must be at least as effective in protecting
employees as the final federal rule. State Plan States must issue the
standard within six months of the promulgation date of the final
federal rule. When OSHA promulgates a new standard or amendment that
does not impose additional or more stringent requirements than an
existing standard, State Plan States are not required to amend their
standards, although OSHA may encourage them to do so.
The 27 states and U.S. territories with OSHA-approved occupational
safety and health plans are: Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii,
Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New
Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wyoming. Connecticut,
Illinois, New Jersey, New York, and the Virgin Islands have OSHA-
approved State Plans that apply to state and local government employees
only.
The amendments made in this direct final rule do not impose any new
requirements on employers. Accordingly, State Plan States are not
required to amend their standards to incorporate the expanded exemption
specified in this direct final rule, but they may do so if they so
choose.
G. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
When OSHA issued the final rule for Cranes and Derricks in
Construction (75
[[Page 67276]]
FR 48130), it reviewed the rule according to the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA; 2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.) and Executive Order
13132 (64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999)), and concluded that the final rule
did not meet the definition of a ``Federal intergovernmental mandate''
under the UMRA. OSHA's standards do not apply to state or local
governments except in states that have voluntarily adopted state plans.
OSHA further noted that the rule imposed costs of over $100 million per
year on the private sector and, therefore, required review under the
UMRA for those costs; the Agency determined that its Final Economic
Analysis met that requirement. Id.
As discussed above in Section IV.B. (Final Economic Analysis and
Final Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis) of this preamble, this
direct final rule reduces expenditures by private-sector employers. For
the purposes of the UMRA, OSHA certifies that this direct final rule
does not mandate that state, local, or tribal governments adopt new,
unfunded regulatory obligations, or increase expenditures by the
private sector of more than $100 million in any year.
H. Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal Governments
OSHA reviewed this direct final rule in accordance with Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249 (Nov. 9, 2000)), and determined that it does
not have ``tribal implications'' as defined in that order. This direct
final rule does not have substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship between the federal government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the federal government and Indian tribes.
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 1926
Cranes and derricks, Construction industry, Occupational safety and
health.
Authority and Signature
David Michaels, Ph.D., MPH, Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health, U.S. Department of Labor, 200
Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20210, authorized the preparation
of this notice. OSHA is issuing this direct final rule under the
following authorities: 29 U.S.C. 653, 655, 657; 40 U.S.C. 3701 et seq.;
5 U.S.C. 553; Secretary of Labor's Order No. 1-2012 (77 FR 3912, Jan.
25, 2012); and 29 CFR part 1911.
Signed at Washington, DC, on October 9, 2012.
David Michaels,
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health.
Amendments to Standards
For the reasons stated in the preamble of this direct final rule,
OSHA is amending 29 CFR part 1926 as follows:
PART 1926--[AMENDED]
Subpart V--Power Transmission and Distribution.
0
1. Revise the authority citation for subpart V to read as follows:
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 3701; 29 U.S.C. 653, 655, 657; Secretary of
Labor's Order Nos. 12-71 (36 FR 8754); 8-76 (41 FR 25059); 9-83 (48
FR 35736), 1-90 (55 FR 9033), 5-2007 (72 FR 31159), or 1-2012 (77 FR
3912), as applicable. Section 1926.951 also is issued under 29 CFR
part 1911.
0
2. Amend Sec. 1926.952 by revising paragraph (c)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1926.952 Mechanical equipment.
* * * * *
(c). * * *
(2) Use of digger derricks must comply with Sec. 1910.269 (in
addition to 29 CFR 1926, subpart O) whenever such use is excluded from
29 CFR 1926, subpart CC, in accordance with Sec. 1926.1400(c)(4).
* * * * *
Subpart CC--Cranes and Derricks in Construction.
0
3. Revise the authority citation for subpart CC to read as follows:
Authority: 40 U.S.C. 3701; 29 U.S.C. 653, 655, 657; and
Secretary of Labor's Order No. 5-2007 (72 FR 31159) or 1-2012 (77 FR
3912), as applicable; and 29 CFR part 1911.
0
4. Amend Sec. 1926.1400 by revising paragraph (c)(4) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1926.1400 Scope.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(4) Digger derricks when used for augering holes for poles carrying
electric or telecommunication lines, placing and removing the poles,
and for handling associated materials for installation on, or removal
from, the poles, or when used for any other work subject to subpart V
of this part. To be eligible for this exclusion, digger-derrick use in
work subject to subpart V of this part must comply with all of the
provisions of that subpart, and digger-derrick use in construction work
for telecommunication service (as defined at Sec. 1910.268(s)(40))
must comply with all of the provisions of Sec. 1910.268.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2012-27210 Filed 11-8-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-26-P