July 2024 – Fed-OSHA Rulemaking – OSHA Updates HazCom Standard


CHANGES ARE again coming to Fed-OSHA’s Hazardous Communications Standard, which governs the handling of chemicals and other dangerous substances.
OSHA’s final rule, which takes effect July 19, 2024, will bring the standard in line with the latest update to the United Nations’ Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals.
The update revises criteria for the classification of certain health and physical hazards, as well as updating labeling requirements and safety data sheets (SDSs), among other changes.
Affected firms may have to update their HazCom program, and provide additional employee training for newly identified physical, health, or other hazards.
It’s important for employers to stay up to date on the HazCom standard to protect their workers. Labels and SDSs are often the first indication to a worker that they are handling a hazardous chemical, so it is imperative that they be as accurate and complete as possible.

 

What the rule does

The new rule ensures that OSHA’s HazCom standard jibes with the Global Harmonized System, which is used in most developed and many developing countries around the world.
It provides consistent definitions of hazards, specific criteria for labels, and a specific format for safety SDSs.
The new classification criteria only affect SDSs and labels for certain products (aerosols, desensitized explosives, and flammable gases). If your firm handles any of these, you will have to ensure that your labels and SDSs for select hazardous chemicals are updated accordingly.

Rule highlights

Labeling — It updates labeling requirements for certain very small containers and bulk containers to ensure the labels are comprehensive and readable.
Manufacturers must only provide the updated label for each individual container with each shipment once the product reaches its customer. Warehousing employees will not be required to open sealed pallets and boxes of containers to relabel them or repackage the product in preprinted bags.
Flammable gas addition — The Flammable Gas hazard class gets a new hazard class (desensitized explosives), as well as new hazard categories:
• Unstable gases in the Flammable Gases class
• Pyrophoric gases in the Flammable Gases class, and
• Nonflammable aerosols in the Aerosols class.

New and revised definitions — There are a number of definitions that are being revised or which are new altogether.

Employer takeaway

HazCom citations are one of the most common citations that OSHA issues. If your operations handle chemicals, you should take the opportunity now to review your HazCom program and plan for compliance by the deadline that affects your company.

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