Oregon Administrative Rules
Chapter 437 - DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER AND BUSINESS SERVICES, OREGON OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH DIVISION
Division 4 - AGRICULTURE
Section 437-004-0405 - Exits and Emergency Action Plan
Universal Citation: OR Admin Rules 437-004-0405
Current through Register Vol. 64, No. 3, March 1, 2025
(1) Application. This does not apply to agricultural labor housing, agricultural buildings or mobile workplaces, such as vehicles or vessels. This applies to non-agricultural type buildings like offices and warehouses where employees spend most of their work time.
(2) Definitions.
(a) Exit. The part of the exit route,
separate from other areas, that is a protected way out of a work
area.
(b) Exit route. A continuous,
unobstructed path from anywhere in a work area to a safe outside place. Exit
routes are three dimensional.
(3) General.
(a) There must be permanent, unobstructed
exit routes to get out of work areas safely during emergencies.
(b) There must be two or more exit routes
depending on the size and layout of the work area and the number of people
involved. A single exit route is acceptable only if all workers can get out
through it safely during an emergency. Locate multiple exit routes apart from
each other.
(4) Design.
(a) There must be a clear and unobstructed
access and exit to any location more than 4 feet above or below the floor.
Access may be by a ladder, stairs or ramp that complies with these
standards.
(b) There must be
unobstructed access to exit routes.
(A) Exit
routes must not pass through or into lockable rooms or dead ends.
(B) Exit routes must be mostly level or have
stairs or ramps.
(c)
Exits must open from the inside without keys, tools or special knowledge.
Devices that lock only from the outside are acceptable. There must be nothing
on an exit door that could hinder its use during an emergency.
(d) An exit route must be able to handle the
maximum number of persons allowed in the area it serves. Exit capacity must not
decrease if the direction of travel changes.
(e) Exit routes must be at least 6 feet 8
inches high at all points.
(f) Exit
routes must be at least 28 inches wide between handrails and wider if needed to
handle the expected occupant load.
(g) Nothing can project into an exit route
that reduces its minimum height or width.
(h) Exit routes must minimize danger to
workers during emergencies.
(i)
Exit routes must have adequate lighting.
(5) Marking.
(a) There must be exit signs at all emergency
exits, except those that are obviously and clearly identifiable. Install
additional directional signs to exits where necessary.
(b) If workers could mistake a nonexit for an
exit, mark it, "Not an Exit" or mark it to indicate its real use.
(6) Special situations.
(a) Exit doors serving hazardous areas must
swing in the direction of exit and open in a way that does not obstruct exit
passageways. Do not allow anything to obstruct or pre- vent the use of an exit.
During fire or panic, it must be easy to open all escape exit doors and windows
from the inside.
(b) Rooms subject
to extremes in temperature or with toxic atmospheres must have at least one
door that opens from the inside. If this door is lockable from the outside,
lighting and a set of instructions for opening the door must be inside the room
on or near the door. It must be easy to find equipment needed to open the door
from the inside. Also, inside the room there must be a way to communicate or a
control that operates an alarm outside the building, or if other employees are
on duty 24 hours a day, outside the room.
Stat. Auth.: ORS 654.025(2) & 656.726(4)
Stats. Implemented: ORS 654.001 - 654.295
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Oregon may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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