| Industry | Compliance
dates:1 (50 µg/m3) |
| Lead chemicals, secondary copper
smelting. Nonferrous foundries . . . . . . . . . . . . |
July 19, 1996 July 19, 1996.2 |
| Brass and bronze ingot manufacture. | 6 years.3 |
| 1 | Calculated by counting from the date the stay on implementation of subsection (6)(a) was lifted by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, the number of years specified in the 1978 lead standard and subsequent amendments for compliance with the PEL of 50 µg/m3 for exposure to airborne concentrations of lead levels for the particular industry. |
| 2 | Large nonferrous foundries (20 or more employees) are required to achieve the PEL of 50 µg/m3 by means of engineering and work practice controls. Small nonferrous foundries (fewer than 20 employees) are required to achieve an 8-hour TWA of 75 µg/m3 by such controls. |
| 3 | Expressed as the number of years from the date on which the Court lifts the stay on the implementation of subsection (6)(a) for this industry for employers to achieve a lead in air concentration of 75 µg/m3. Compliance with subsection (6) in this industry is determined by a compliance directive that incorporates elements from the settlement agreement between OSHA and representatives of the industry. |
CAUTION: CLOTHING CONTAMINATED WITH LEAD.
DO NOT REMOVE DUST BY BLOWING OR SHAKING.
DISPOSE OF LEAD CONTAMINATED WASH WATER IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE LOCAL, STATE, OR FEDERAL REGULATIONS.
| Effective Date |
Removal Blood Level (µg/100g) | Air Lead (µg/m3) |
Return
Blood Lead (µg/100g) |
| 9/6/81 | At or above 70 |
50 or above | At or below 50 |
| 9/6/82 | At or above 60 |
30 or above | At or below 40 |
| 9/6/84 | At or above 50 averaged over six months |
30 or above | At or below 40 |
| Industry | Permissible Lead Level/Compliance Date | ||
| 200µg/m3 | 100µg/m3 | 50µg/m3 | |
| Primary Lead Production | 1973 | 06/29/84 | 06/29/91 |
| Secondary Lead Production | 1973 |
06/29/84 |
06/29/91 |
| Lead Acid Battery Manufacturing | 1973 |
06/29/83 |
06/29/91 |
| Automobile Mfg./Solder, Grinding | 1973 |
N/A |
03/08/97 |
| Electronics, Gray Iron Foundries, Ink Mfg., Paints and Coatings Mfg., Can Mfg., Wallpaper Mfg., and Printing. | 1973 |
N/A |
06/29/91 |
| Lead Chemical Mfg., Nonferrous Foundries, Leaded Steel Mfg., Battery Breaking in the Collection and Processing of Scrap (when not a part of secondary lead smelter) Secondary Copper Smelter, Brass and Bronze Ingot Production. | 1973 | N/A | N/A1* |
| All Other Industries | 1973 | N/A | 09/08/92 |
| * | Feasibility of achieving the PEL by engineering and work practice controls for these industries has yet to be resolved in court, therefore no date has been scheduled. |
| EFFECTIVE DATE | |||||||
| Sept. 6, 1980 | Sept. 6, 1981 | Sept. 6, 1982 | Sept. 6, 1983 | Sept. 6, 1984 | |||
| A. | Blood lead level requiring employee medical removal (level must be confirmed with second follow-up blood lead level within two weeks of first report). | >80 µg/100g. |
>70 µg/100g. |
>60 µg/100g. |
>60 µg/100g. |
>60 µg/100g or average of last three blood samples or all blood samples over previous 6 months (whichever is over a longer time period) is 50 µg/100g. or greater unless last sample is 40 µg/100g or less. |
|
| B. | Frequency which employees exposed is action level of lead (30 µg/m8 TWA) must have blood lead level checked. (ZPP is also required in each occasion that a blood test is obtained): | ||||||
| 1. | Last blood lead level less than 40 µg/100g . . . . . . . . . . . . | Every 6 months. | Every 6 months. | Every 6 months. | Every 6 months. | Every 6 months. | |
| 2. | Last blood lead level between 40 µg/100g and level requiring medical removal (see A above) . . . . . . . . . . . . | Every 2 months. | Every 2 months. | Every 2 months. | Every 2 months. | Every 2 months. | |
| 3. | Employees removed from exposure to lead because of an elevated blood lead level . . . . . . . . . . . . | Every 1 month. | Every 1 month. | Every 1 month. | Every 1 month. | Every 1 month. | |
| C. | Permissible airborne exposure limit for workers removed from work due to an elevated blood lead level (without regard to respirator protection). | 100 µg/m3 8 hr TWA |
50 µg/m3 8 hr TWA |
30 µg/m3 8 hr TWA |
30 µg/m3 8 hr TWA |
30 µg/m3 8 hr TWA |
|
| D. | Blood lead level confirmed with a second blood analysis, at which employee may return to work. Permissible exposure without regard to respirator protection is listed by industry in Table 1. | 60 µg/100g | 50 µg/100g | 40 µg/100g | 40 µg/100g | 40 µg/100g | |
| Note: | Where medical opinion indicates that an employee is at risk of material impairment from exposure to lead, the physician can remove an employee from exposure exceeding the action level (or less) or recommend special protective measures as deemed appropriate and necessary. Medical monitoring during the medical removal period can be more stringent than noted in the table above if the physician so specifies. Return to work or removal of limitations and special protections is permitted when the physician indicates that the worker is no longer at risk of material impairment. |
| General | - | weight loss, fatigue, decreased appetite. |
| Head, Eyes, Ears, Nose, Throat (HEENT) | - | headaches, visual disturbance or decreased visual acuity, hearing deficits or tinnitus, pigmentation of the oral mucosa, or metallic taste in mouth. |
| Cardiopulmonary | - | shortness of breath, cough, chest pains, palpitations, or orthopnea. |
| Gastrointestinal | - | nausea, vomiting, heartburn, abdominal pain, constipation or diarrhea. |
| Neurologic | - | irritability, insomnia, weakness (fatigue), dizziness, loss of memory, confusion, hallucinations, incoordination, ataxia, decreased strength in hands or feet, disturbance in gait, difficulty in climbing stairs, or seizures. |
| Hematologic | - | pallor, easy fatigability, abnormal blood loss, melena. |
| Reproductive (male or female and spouse where relevant) | - | history of infertility, impotence, loss of libido, abnormal menstrual periods, history of miscarriages, stillbirths, or children with birth defects. |
| Musculoskeletal | - | muscle and joint pains. |
| • | Any open flame operation involving lead-containing solder in a manner producing molten solder, including the manufacture or repair of motor vehicle radiators; |
| • | Sanding, cutting or grinding of lead-containing solder; |
| • | Breaking, recycling or manufacture of lead-containing batteries; |
| • | Casting objects using lead, brass, or lead-containing alloys; |
| • | Where lead-containing coatings or paints are present: |
| • | abrasive blasting |
| • | welding |
| • | cutting |
| • | torch burning |
| • | manual demolition of structures |
| • | manual scraping |
| • | manual sanding |
| • | heat gun applications |
| • | power tool cleaning |
| • | rivet busting |
| • | clean-up activities where dry expendable abrasives are used |
| • | abrasive blasting enclosure movement and removal; |
| • | Spray-painting with lead-containing paint; |
| • | Using lead-containing mortar; |
| • | Lead burning; |
| • | Operation or cleaning of shooting facilities where lead bullets are used; |
| • | Formulation or processing of lead-containing pigments or paints; |
| • | Cutting, burning, or melting of lead-containing materials. |