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29 CFR | | 40 CFR |
| 49 CFR |
| FR Daily |
| MSDS |
|Seton |
29 CFR - CHAPTER XVII - PART
1910 § 1910.37 Maintenance, safeguards, and operational features for
exit routes.
(a) The danger to employees must be minimized. (1) Exit routes must be
kept free of explosive or highly flammable furnishings or other decorations. (2) Exit routes must be arranged so that employees will not have to travel
toward a high hazard area, unless the path of travel is effectively shielded
from the high hazard area by suitable partitions or other physical barriers. (3) Exit routes must be free and unobstructed. No materials or equipment may
be placed, either permanently or temporarily, within the exit route. The exit
access must not go through a room that can be locked, such as a bathroom, to
reach an exit or exit discharge, nor may it lead into a dead-end corridor.
Stairs or a ramp must be provided where the exit route is not substantially
level. (4) Safeguards designed to protect employees during an emergency ( e.g.,
sprinkler systems, alarm systems, fire doors, exit lighting) must be in proper
working order at all times. (b) Lighting and marking must be adequate and appropriate. (1) Each
exit route must be adequately lighted so that an employee with normal vision can
see along the exit route.
(3) Each exit route door must be free of decorations or signs that obscure
the visibility of the exit route door.
(c) The fire retardant properties of paints or solutions must be
maintained. Fire retardant paints or solutions must be renewed as often as
necessary to maintain their fire retardant properties. (d) Exit routes must be maintained during construction, repairs, or
alterations. (1) During new construction, employees must not occupy a
workplace until the exit routes required by this subpart are completed and ready
for employee use for the portion of the workplace they occupy. (2) During repairs or alterations, employees must not occupy a workplace
unless the exit routes required by this subpart are available and existing fire
protections are maintained, or until alternate fire protection is furnished that
provides an equivalent level of safety. (3) Employees must not be exposed to hazards of flammable or explosive
substances or equipment used during construction, repairs, or alterations, that
are beyond the normal permissible conditions in the workplace, or that would
impede exiting the workplace. (e) An employee alarm system must be operable. Employers must install
and maintain an operable employee alarm system that has a distinctive signal to
warn employees of fire or other emergencies, unless employees can promptly see
or smell a fire or other hazard in time to provide adequate warning to them. The
employee alarm system must comply with § 1910.165.
PART 1910 -- OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH STANDARDS - CONTENTS
(2)
Each exit must be clearly visible and marked by a sign reading "Exit."
(4)
If the direction of travel to the exit or exit discharge is not immediately
apparent, signs must be posted along the exit access indicating the direction of
travel to the nearest exit and exit discharge. Additionally, the line-of-sight
to an exit sign must clearly be visible at all times.
(5)
Each doorway or passage along an exit access that could be mistaken for an exit
must be marked "Not an Exit" or similar designation, or be identified by a sign
indicating its actual use ( e.g., closet).
(6)
Each exit sign must be illuminated to a surface value of at least five
foot-candles (54 lux) by a reliable light source and be distinctive in color.
Self-luminous or electroluminescent signs that have a minimum luminance surface
value of at least .06 footlamberts (0.21 cd/m
(7) Each exit sign must have the word "Exit" in plainly legible letters not
less than six inches (15.2 cm) high, with the principal strokes of the letters
in the word "Exit" not less than three-fourths of an inch (1.9 cm) wide.