Pennsylvania Code
Title 34 - LABOR AND INDUSTRY
Part I - Department of Labor and Industry
Chapter 39 - SAFETY STANDARDS-GENERAL
Subchapter A - SAFE PRACTICES
RECOMMENDATIONS
Section 39.22 - Yard and internal housekeeping
Current through Register Vol. 54, No. 38, September 21, 2024
(a) Clear travelways. All roadways, walkways, aisles, or other foot, crane, or vehicular travelways should be clearly marked or otherwise well defined. They should be kept in good repair and free from all debris and obstacles. All walkways above the level of the ground shall be equipped with railings and toeboards in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 47, Subchapter G (relating to railings, toeboards, open-sided floors, platforms, and runways). All aisles, emergency exits, and other passageways should be kept clear of tools or material of any kind.
(b) Slipping hazards. Puddles or drippings of oil, grease, water, or other liquids should be rendered harmless by mopping up and strewing sand or sawdust on the floor until the floor is dry. Oil-soaked sawdust should be disposed of promptly to prevent spontaneous ignition. Drippings on floors should be prevented by eliminating the cause or by placing drip pans in position until the cause is eliminated.
(c) Falling tools. Workmen working at elevated levels should not strew their tools about carelessly. Tools should be carried in tool belts or kept in tool boxes when not in actual use. The practice of throwing tools from one level to another should be discouraged. They should be raised or lowered with light ropes or passed from hand to hand. The practice of working above unsheltered workmen should be actively discouraged at all times. Tools or material should never be piled or leaned against anything.
(d) Piling of materials. Materials should be piled as follows:
(e) Clear travelways and work places. Loose-board material and other objects or materials should not be permitted to remain strewn haphazardly on the floor or ground in places where persons have to walk or work, but should be piled up neatly. No loose material of any description should be permitted to remain unsecured in an overhead position.
(f) Nails. Nails should conform to the following:
(g) Sharp edged scrap. All objects with sharp edges, such as scraps of glass, tin, sheet metal, and the like, should not be thrown into waste baskets or other containers ordinarily used for other debris, but should be placed in separate containers. Neither should such material be permitted to remain on floors except during operations normally resulting in its creation. In such cases, containers should be provided to catch such waste material as it drops from machines or benches and the floors should be frequently cleaned up each day to prevent accumulations.
(h) Cleaning up debris. All rags, waste paper, bits of broken lumber, excelsior, packing materials and other inflammable debris should be cleaned up daily from under workbenches, behind machines, and all other spaces, and be kept in suitably covered containers.
(i) Gummed or caked surfaces. Surfaces which become gummed or caked with accumulated dirt, paint, grease or other material creating a slipping hazard, should be scraped or otherwise kept clean. Snow and ice should be promptly removed from all walkways and work places. Icicles hanging over walkways and work places should be knocked down.
(j) Dust elimination. Dry sweeping in workrooms should be permitted only where there is no dust hazard or where the nature of the work performed precludes the use of other methods; otherwise, all floors should be sprinkled with water before sweeping. The use of disinfecting solutions in the water is also recommended. The practice of using damp sawdust or other wetted materials is acceptable in lieu of sprinkling water, especially around electric equipment where the use of water might create a hazard.
(k) Spitting. In order to prevent the spread of infection, the practice of spitting on the floor, on piles of material, in waste products, in corners, or in reservoirs of machine cutting oils or compounds should not be permitted. All machine-cutting oils or compounds should be frequently sterilized by boiling or by the addition of a germ-killing solution. Persons subject to sores or susceptible to skin irritations, should not operate a machine using cutting oils or compounds.
(l) Refuse containers. Covered refuse cans or boxes should be provided at convenient points and workmen required to deposit all refuse in such cans or boxes. Such cans or boxes should be emptied frequently enough to prevent overflow or the creation of obnoxious odors. Separate containers equipped with gravity closing lids should be provided for oily waste. Oily waste should be burned only by an authorized person equipped with a long handled tool or shovel for handling such waste.