WAC 246-221-117
Use of individual respiratory protection
equipment. If the licensee assigns or permits the use of
respiratory protection equipment to limit the intake of
radioactive material:
(1) The licensee shall use only respiratory protection
equipment that is:
(a) Tested and certified by the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH); or
(b) Approved by the department on the basis of the
licensee's submittal of an application for authorized use of
other respiratory protection equipment, including a
demonstration by testing, or a demonstration on the basis of
reliable test information, that the material and performance
characteristics of the equipment are capable of providing the
proposed degree of protection under anticipated conditions of
use.
(2) The licensee shall implement and maintain a
respiratory protection program that includes:
(a) Air sampling sufficient to identify the potential
hazard, permit proper equipment selection, and estimate
exposures;
(b) Surveys and bioassays, as appropriate, to evaluate
actual intakes;
(c) Testing of respirators for operability (user seal
check for face sealing devices and functional check for
others) immediately prior to each use;
(d) Written procedures regarding:
(i) Monitoring, including air sampling and bioassays;
(ii) Supervision and training of respirator users;
(iii) Fit testing;
(iv) Respirator selection;
(v) Breathing air quality;
(vi) Inventory and control;
(vii) Storage, issuance, maintenance, repair, testing,
and quality assurance of respiratory protection equipment;
(viii) Recordkeeping; and
(ix) Limitations on periods of respirator use and relief
from respirator use;
(e) Determination by a physician that the individual user
is medically fit to use respiratory protection equipment:
(i) Before the initial fitting of a face sealing
respirator;
(ii) Before the first field use of nonface sealing
respirators; and
(iii) Either every twelve months thereafter, or
periodically at a frequency determined by a physician; and
(f) Fit testing, with a fit factor greater than or equal
to ten times the APF for negative pressure devices, and a fit
factor greater than or equal to five hundred for any positive
pressure, continuous flow, and pressure-demand devices, before
the first field use of tight fitting, face sealing
respirators, and periodically thereafter at a frequency not to
exceed one year. Fit testing must be performed with the
facepiece operating in the negative pressure mode.
(3) The licensee shall advise each respirator user that
the user may leave the area at any time for relief from
respirator use in the event of equipment malfunction, physical
or psychological distress, procedural or communication
failure, significant deterioration of operating conditions, or
any other conditions that might require relief.
(4) The licensee shall also consider limitations
appropriate to the type and mode of use. When selecting
respiratory devices the licensee shall provide for vision
correction, adequate communication, low temperature work
environments, and the concurrent use of other safety or
radiological protection equipment. The licensee shall use
equipment in such a way as not to interfere with the proper
operation of the respirator.
(5) Standby rescue persons are required whenever
one-piece atmosphere-supplying suits, or any combination of
supplied air respiratory protection device and personnel
protective equipment are used from which an unaided individual
would have difficulty extricating himself or herself. The
standby persons must be equipped with respiratory protection
devices or other apparatus appropriate for the potential
hazards. The standby rescue persons shall observe or
otherwise maintain continuous communication with the workers
(visual, voice, signal line, telephone, radio, or other
suitable means), and be immediately available to assist them
in case of a failure of the air supply or for any other reason
that requires relief from distress. A sufficient number of
standby rescue persons must be immediately available to assist
all users of this type of equipment and to provide effective
emergency rescue if needed.
(6) Atmosphere-supplying respirators must be supplied
with respirable air of grade D quality or better as defined by
the Compressed Gas Association in publication G-7.1,
"Commodity Specification for Air," 1997 and included in the
regulations of the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (29 CFR 1910.134 (i)(1)(ii)(A) through (E)). Grade D quality air criteria include:
(a) Oxygen content (v/v) of 19.5-23.5%;
(b) Hydrocarbon (condensed) content of 5 milligrams per
cubic meter of air or less;
(c) Carbon monoxide (CO) content of 10 ppm or less;
(d) Carbon dioxide content of 1,000 ppm or less; and
(e) Lack of noticeable odor.
(7) The licensee shall ensure that no objects, materials
or substances, such as facial hair, or any conditions that
interfere with the face-to-facepiece seal or valve function,
and that are under the control of the respirator wearer, are
present between the skin of the wearer's face and the sealing
surface of a tight-fitting respirator facepiece.
(8) In estimating the dose to individuals from intake of
airborne radioactive materials, the concentration of
radioactive material in the air that is inhaled when
respirators are worn is initially assumed to be the ambient
concentration in air without respiratory protection, divided
by the assigned protection factor. If the dose is later found
to be greater than the estimated dose, the corrected value
must be used. If the dose is later found to be less than the
estimated dose, the corrected value may be used.
(9) The department may impose restrictions in addition to
the provisions of this section, WAC 246-221-113 and 246-221-285, in order to:
(a) Ensure that the respiratory protection program of the
licensee is adequate to limit doses to individuals from
intakes of airborne radioactive materials consistent with
maintaining total effective dose equivalent ALARA; and
(b) Limit the extent to which a licensee may use
respiratory protection equipment instead of process or other
engineering controls.
(10) The licensee shall obtain authorization from the
department before using assigned protection factors in excess
of those specified in WAC 246-221-285. The department may
authorize a licensee to use higher assigned protection factors
on receipt of an application that:
(a) Describes the situation for which a need exists for
higher protection factors; and
(b) Demonstrates that the respiratory protection
equipment provides these higher protection factors under the
proposed conditions of use.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.98.050. 01-05-110, §
246-221-117, filed 2/21/01, effective 3/24/01; 98-13-034, §
246-221-117, filed 6/8/98, effective 7/9/98; 94-01-073, §
246-221-117, filed 12/9/93, effective 1/9/94.]