Texas Administrative Code
Title 26 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Part 1 - HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION
Chapter 554 - NURSING FACILITY REQUIREMENTS FOR LICENSURE AND MEDICAID CERTIFICATION
Subchapter D - FACILITY CONSTRUCTION
Division 9 - FACILITIES LICENSED ON OR AFTER APRIL 2, 2018
Section 554.361 - Electrical Requirements for New Facilities
Universal Citation: 26 TX Admin Code ยง 554.361
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) The design of the electrical systems must be done by or under the direction of a licensed professional electrical engineer approved by the Texas Board of Professional Engineers and Land Surveyors to operate in Texas, and the parts of the plans and specifications covering electrical design must bear the legible seal of the engineer.
(1) Utilities; heating, ventilating, and
air-conditioning systems; vertical conveyors; and chutes must meet the
requirements of NFPA 101, Chapter 9, Building Service and Fire Protection
Equipment.
(2) Fire protection
systems, including fire alarms, must meet the requirements of §554.357 of
this division (relating to Fire Protection Systems for New
Facilities).
(3) Lighting and
outlets at resident bedrooms must meet the requirements of §554.354 of
this division (relating to Architectural Space Planning and Utilization for New
Facilities).
(b) Electrical systems.
(1) Electrical systems
must meet the installation requirements of NFPA 70.
(2) Electrical systems must meet the
performance requirements of NFPA 99.
(3) Branch circuits serving resident bedrooms
must meet the requirements of NFPA 99.
(4) Essential Electrical System (EES).
(A) To provide electricity during an
interruption of the normal electric supply, an emergency source of electricity
must be provided and connected to certain circuits for lighting and power. All
facilities covered by this section must comply with the EES requirements for
new health care facilities in NFPA 99, based on the risk category determined by
the assessment required by § 554.300(i) of this subchapter (relating to
General Requirements).
(i) If the determined
risk category is Category 2, as defined in NFPA 99, the EES must meet the
requirements for a Type II EES according to NFPA 99.
(ii) If the determined risk category is
Category 1, as defined in NFPA 99, the EES must meet the requirements for a
Type I EES according to NFPA 99.
(iii) A Type I EES serving a portion of a
facility categorized as Category 1 risk is permitted to also serve a portion of
the same facility categorized as Category 2 risk.
(iv) Distribution requirements for Type I or
Type II EES must be according to NFPA 99.
(B) In addition to systems and devices
required for the type of EES installed, the following systems and devices must
be connected to the appropriate branches of the EES, according to NFPA 99:
(i) illumination for the following areas:
(I) means of egress, including areas
immediately outside of exit doors;
(II) nurses' stations;
(III) medication rooms;
(IV) dining, living, and recreation rooms,
including activity rooms;
(V)
bathing rooms not directly connected to resident bedrooms;
(ii) exit signs and exit directional signs as
required by NFPA 101;
(iii) alarm
systems, including fire alarms and alarms required for nonflammable medical gas
systems, if installed;
(iv) task
illumination and selected receptacles at the generator set location;
(v) selected duplex receptacles including
receptacles in such areas in resident corridors, at each resident bed location,
in nurses' stations, and in medication rooms, including biologicals
refrigerator;
(vi) nurse call
systems;
(vii) resident room night
lights;
(viii) a light and
receptacle in an electrical room or a boiler room;
(ix) elevator cab lighting, control, and
communication systems;
(x) all
facility telephone equipment;
(xi)
paging or speaker systems, if intended for communication during an emergency.
Radio transceivers installed for emergency use must be capable of operating for
at least one hour upon total failure of both normal and emergency
power.
(xii) Heating Equipment to
Provide Heating for Resident Bedrooms. A facility must provide heating in
resident bedrooms during disruption of the normal power source unless one of
the following conditions applies:
(I) The
outside design temperature is higher than 20 degrees Fahrenheit (-6.7 degrees
Celsius);
(II) The outside design
temperature is lower than 20 degrees Fahrenheit (-6.7 degrees Celsius) and,
when selected rooms are provided for the needs of all residents, then only such
rooms need be heated.
(III) The
facility is served by a dual source of normal power.
(xiii) A facility must provide throw-over
facilities to allow the temporary operation of any elevator for the release of
passengers in instances when an interruption of power would result in elevators
stopping between floors.
(C) The emergency lighting must be
automatically in operation within ten seconds after the interruption of the
normal power supply. Emergency egress lighting must not be switched.
(D) Receptacles and switches connected to
emergency power must have red faceplates.
(E) The design and installation of emergency
motor generators must be according to NFPA 37, NFPA 99, and NFPA 110.
(i) Nursing facilities and contiguous or
same-site facilities, such as hospitals and assisted living facilities, may be
served by the same generating equipment so long as the integrity of the
individual facilities' emergency or back-up power systems is not compromised.
This permission applies only to the generating equipment and not to automatic
or manual transfer switches or to distribution systems.
(ii) Generators must be located a minimum of
three feet from a combustible exterior building finish and a minimum of five
feet from a building opening, if located on the exterior of the
building.
(iii) A facility must
provide a noncombustible protective cover or the protection recommended by the
manufacturer when a generator is located on the exterior of the
building.
(iv) Stored fuel capacity
must be sufficient for not less than four hours of required generator
operation.
(v) Motor generators
fueled by public utility natural gas must have the capability to be switched to
an alternate fuel source according to NFPA 70.
(F) The wiring circuits for the EES must be
kept entirely independent of all other wiring and must not enter the same
race-ways, boxes, or cabinets according to NFPA 70.
(G) A facility must meet the requirements for
the administration of the EES, including maintenance and testing of the EES,
according to the requirements of NFPA 99 for the type of EES installed, and the
requirements of § 554.326(d) of this subchapter (relating to Safety
Operations).
(5) General
Lighting Requirements. General lighting requirements are as follows:
(A) All spaces occupied by people, machinery,
equipment, approaches to buildings, and parking lots must have
lighting.
(B) All quality,
intensity, and type of lighting must be adequate and appropriate to the space
and all functions within the space.
(C) Minimum lighting levels can be found in
the Illuminating Engineering Society Lighting Handbook, latest edition, but
must not be lower than the following.
(i)
Minimum illumination must be 20 footcandles in resident rooms, corridors,
nurses' stations, dining rooms, lobbies, toilets, bathing facilities,
laundries, stairways, and elevators. Illumination requirements for these areas
apply to lighting throughout the space and are measured at approximately 30
inches above the floor anywhere in the room.
(ii) Minimum illumination for over-bed
reading lamps, medication-preparation or storage area, kitchens, and nurses'
station desks must be 50 footcandles. Illumination requirements for these areas
apply to the task performed and are measured on the task.
(D) A facility must provide general
illumination, with provisions for reduction of light levels at night, in a
nursing unit corridor.
(E) A
facility must provide a basket wire guard or other suitable shield to prevent
breakage or contact between combustible materials and exposed incandescent
light bulbs, or other high-heat generating lamps, in closets or other similar
spaces.
(F) Exposed incandescent or
fluorescent bulbs are not permitted in food service or other areas where glass
fragments from breakage may get into food, medications, linens, or utensils. A
facility must protect all fluorescent bulbs with a shield or catcher to prevent
bulb drop-out.
(6)
Receptacles or convenience outlets.
(A)
Receptacles in bedrooms must meet the requirements in §554.354(a)(6) of
this division (relating to Architectural Space Planning and Utilization for New
Facilities).
(B) Duplex receptacles
for general use must be installed in corridors spaced not more than 50 feet
apart and within 25 feet of ends of corridors. A facility must provide at least
one duplex receptacle with emergency electrical service in each resident
corridor.
(C) Receptacles must be
provided with emergency electrical service for essential needs such as
medication refrigerators and systems or equipment whose failure is likely to
result in major injury or death to a resident.
(D) Receptacles in the remainder of the
building must be sufficient to serve the present and future needs of residents
and equipment.
(E) Location of
receptacles, horizontally and vertically, should be carefully planned and
coordinated with the expected designed use of furnishings and equipment to
maximize their accessibility and to minimize conditions such as beds or
furniture being jammed against plugs used in the outlets.
(F) Exterior receptacles must be an approved
waterproof type.
(G) A facility
must provide ground fault interruption protection at appropriate locations such
as at whirlpools and other wet areas according to the NFPA 70.
(c) Nurse call systems.
(1) A nurse call system consists of power
units, annunciator control units, corridor dome stations, emergency call
stations, bedside call stations, and activating devices. The units must be
compatible and laboratory listed by a nationally recognized testing laboratory
for the system and use intended.
(2) Each resident bedroom must be served by
at least one call station and each bed must be provided with a call switch. Two
call switches serving adjacent beds may be served by one call station. Each
call entered into the system must activate a corridor dome light above the
bedroom, bathroom, or toilet room corridor door, a visual signal at the nurses'
station which indicates the room from which the call was placed, and a
continuous or intermittent continuous audible signal of sufficient amplitude to
be clearly heard by nursing staff. The amplitude or pitch of the audible signal
must not be such that it is irritating to residents or visitors. The system
must be designed so that calls entered into the system may be canceled only at
the call station. Intercom-type systems which meet this requirement are
acceptable.
(3) A nurse call system
that provides two-way voice communication must be equipped with an indicating
light at each call station which lights and remains lighted as long as the
voice circuit is operating.
(4) A
nurse call emergency switch must be provided for resident use at each
resident's toilet, bath, and shower. These switches must be usable by residents
using the fixtures and by a collapsed resident lying on the floor.
(5) A nurse call system must meet UL 1069 for
the core system of power units, annunciator control units, corridor dome
lights, emergency call stations, bedside call stations, and activating devices;
and
(6) An ancillary or
supplemental device, including a pocket pager or other portable device, is not
required to meet UL 1069.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Texas 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.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
Privacy Policy and
Terms of Service apply.