WAC 296-841-100
Scope. This chapter applies when your
employees are, or could be, exposed to an airborne hazard.
• The following are examples of airborne contaminants
that may become airborne hazards in some workplaces:
– Chemicals listed in Table 3, Permissible Exposure
Limits (PELs) for Airborne Contaminants
– Any substance:
▪ Listed in the latest edition of the NIOSH Registry of
Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances
▪ For which positive evidence of an acute or chronic
health hazard exists through tests conducted by, or known to,
the employer
▪ That may pose a hazard to human health as stated on a
material safety data sheet (MSDS) kept by, or known to, the
employer
– Biological agents such as harmful bacteria, viruses or
fungi
▪ Examples include TB aerosols and anthrax
– Pesticides
– Chemicals used as crowd control agents, such as pepper
spray
– Chemicals present at clandestine drug labs.
• Airborne contaminants exist in a variety of physical
forms such as dusts, fibers, fogs, fumes, mists, gases, smoke,
sprays, vapors, or aerosols.
Definition:
Exposed or exposure:
The contact an employee has with a toxic substance,
harmful physical agent or oxygen-deficient condition, whether
or not protection is provided by respirators or other personal
protective equipment (PPE). Exposure can occur through
various routes of entry, such as inhalation, ingestion, skin
contact, or skin absorption.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 49.17.010, 49.17.040, 49.17.050,
49.17.060. 07-05-062, § 296-841-100, filed 2/20/07, effective
4/1/07; 06-08-087, § 296-841-100, filed 4/4/06, effective
9/1/06; 05-17-168, § 296-841-100, filed 8/23/05, effective
1/1/06; 04-18-079, § 296-841-100, filed 8/31/04, effective
11/1/04; 03-20-115, § 296-841-100, filed 10/1/03, effective
1/1/04.]