WAC 296-24-56701
Appendix. This appendix serves as a
nonmandatory guideline to assist employers in complying with
the appropriate requirements.
(1) Employee emergency plans. Emergency action plan
elements. The emergency action plan should address
emergencies that the employer may reasonably expect in the
workplace. Examples are: Fire, toxic chemical releases;
hurricanes; tornadoes; blizzards; floods; and others. The
elements of the emergency action plan presented in WAC 296-24-567 (1)(b) can be supplemented by the following to more
effectively achieve employee safety and health in an
emergency. The employer should list in detail the procedures
to be taken by those employees who have been selected to
remain behind to care for essential plant operations until
their evacuations become absolutely necessary. Essential
plant operations may include the monitoring of plant power
supplies, water supplies, and other essential services which
cannot be shut down for every emergency alarm. Essential
plant operations may also include chemical or manufacturing
processes which must be shut down in stages or steps where
certain employees must be present to assure that safe shut
down procedures are completed.
The use of floor plans or workplace maps which clearly
show the emergency escape routes should be included in the
emergency action plan. Color coding will aid employees in
determining their route assignments.
The employer should also develop and explain in detail
what rescue and medical first-aid duties are to be performed
and by whom. All employees are to be told what actions they
are to take in these emergency situations that the employer
anticipates may occur in the workplace.
(2) Emergency evacuation. At the time of an emergency,
employees should know what type of evacuation is necessary and
what their role is in carrying out the plan. In some cases
where the emergency is very grave, total and immediate
evacuation of all employees is necessary. In other
emergencies, a partial evacuation of nonessential employees
with a delayed evacuation of others may be necessary for
continued plant operation. In some cases, only those
employees in the immediate area of the fire may be expected to
evacuate or move to a safe area such as when a local
application fire suppression system discharge employee alarm
is sounded. Employees must be sure that they know what is
expected of them in all such emergency possibilities which
have been planned in order to provide assurance of their
safety from fire or other emergency.
The designation of refuge or safe areas for evacuation
should be determined and identified in the plan. In a
building divided into fire zones by fire walls, the refuge
area may still be within the same building but in a different
zone from where the emergency occurs.
Exterior refuge or safe areas may include parking lots,
open fields or streets which are located away from the site of
the emergency and which provide sufficient space to
accommodate the employees. Employees should be instructed to
move away from the exit discharge doors of the building, and
to avoid congregating close to the building where they may
hamper emergency operations.
(3) Emergency action plan training. The employer should
assure that an adequate number of employees are available at
all times during working hours to act as evacuation wardens so
that employees can be swiftly moved from the danger location
to the safe areas. Generally, one warden for each twenty
employees in the workplace should be able to provide adequate
guidance and instruction at the time of a fire emergency. The
employees selected or who volunteer to serve as wardens should
be trained in the complete workplace layout and the various
alternative escape routes from the workplace. All wardens and
fellow employees should be made aware of handicapped employees
who may need extra assistance, such as using the buddy system,
and of hazardous areas to be avoided during emergencies. Before leaving, wardens should check rooms and other enclosed
spaces in the workplace for employees who may be trapped or
otherwise unable to evacuate the area.
After the desired degree of evacuation is completed, the
wardens should be able to account for or otherwise verify that
all employees are in the safe areas.
In buildings with several places of employment, employers
are encouraged to coordinate their plans with the other
employers in the building. A building-wide or standardized
plan for the whole building is acceptable provided that the
employers inform their respective employees of their duties
and responsibilities under the plan. The standardized plan
need not be kept by each employer in the multiemployer
building provided there is an accessible location within the
building where the plan can be reviewed by affected employees.
When multiemployer, building-wide plans are not feasible,
employers should coordinate their plans with the other
employers within the building to assure that conflicts and
confusion are avoided during time of emergencies. In
multistory buildings where more than one employer is on a
single floor, it is essential that these employers coordinate
their plans with each other to avoid conflicts and confusion.
(4) Fire prevention housekeeping. The standard calls for
the control of accumulations of flammable and combustible
waste materials.
It is the intent of this standard to assure that
hazardous accumulations of combustible waste materials are
controlled so that a fast developing fire, rapid spread of
toxic smoke, or an explosion will not occur. This does not
necessarily mean that each room has to be swept each day. Employers and employees should be aware of the hazardous
properties of materials in their workplaces, and the degree of
hazard each poses. Certainly, oil soaked rags have to be
treated differently than general paper trash in office areas. However, large accumulations of waste paper or corrugated
boxes, etc., can pose a significant fire hazard. Accumulations of materials which can cause large fires or
generate dense smoke that are easily ignited or may start from
spontaneous combustion, are the types of materials with which
this standard is concerned. Such combustible materials may be
easily ignited by matches, welder's sparks, cigarettes, and
similar low level energy ignition sources.
(5) Maintenance of equipment under the fire prevention
plan. Certain equipment is often installed in workplaces to
control heat sources or to detect fuel leaks. An example is a
temperature limit switch often found on deep-fat food fryers
found in restaurants. There may be similar switches for high
temperature dip tanks, or flame failure and flashback arrester
devices on furnaces and similar heat producing equipment. If
these devices are not properly maintained or if they become
inoperative, a definite fire hazard exists. Again employees
and supervisors should be aware of the specific type of
control devices on equipment involved with combustible
materials in the workplace and should make sure, through
periodic inspection or testing, that these controls are
operable. Manufacturers' recommendations should be followed
to assure proper maintenance procedures.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 49.17.040 and 49.17.050. 82-02-003
(Order 81-32), § 296-24-56701, filed 12/24/81.]