The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has published a final rule on Aug. 28 revising the beryllium standards for construction and shipyards.
According to a release, the final rule includes changes designed to clarify the standards and simplify or improve compliance. These changes maintain protection for workers while ensuring that the standard is well understood and compliance is simple and straightforward.
The final rule amends the following paragraphs in the beryllium standards for construction and shipyards: Definitions, Methods of Compliance, Respiratory Protection, Personal Protective Clothing and Equipment, Housekeeping, Hazard Communication, Medical Surveillance, and Recordkeeping.
OSHA says it has removed the Hygiene Areas and Practices paragraph from the final standards because the necessary protections are provided by existing OSHA standards for sanitation.
The effective date of the revisions in this final rule is September 30. OSHA began enforcing the new permissible exposure limits in the 2017 beryllium standards for construction and shipyards in May 2018.
The association says it will begin enforcing the remaining provisions of the standards on September 30. The final standard will affect approximately 12,000 workers employed in nearly 2,800 establishments in the construction and shipyard industries. The final standards are estimated to yield $2.5 million in total annualized cost savings to employers.
Latest from Construction & Demolition Recycling
- ReMA sues Minnesota over copper recycling law
- Disappointing December predicted for overseas ferrous market
- Mazza Recycling acquires New Jersey hauling firm
- AEM sees green building remaining a trend in 2025
- Powerscreen adds four to its hall of fame
- Registration now open for C&D World 2025
- Volvo adds 2 models to updated excavator line
- Werk-Brau to host women in construction events