McCraren Compliance

Error in Walking-Working Surfaces rule prompts interim guidance

compliance-guidance

Washington — OSHA has released interim enforcement guidance on certain handrail and stair rail system requirements.

According to a memo issued Feb. 26, the guidance is expected to remain in place until the agency finalizes a proposed rule issued in 2021.

The impetus for the proposed rule was a formatting error in Table D-2 of the 2016 Walking-Working Surfaces final rule. OSHA inadvertently omitted several words for “a stairway with a width of less than 44 inches and two open sides.”

The table currently states that the agency requires “one stair rail system each open side,” but OSHA intended to require “one stair rail system with handrail on each open side.”

The interim enforcement guidance notes that “OSHA also recognized that employers may have relied on the error in Table D-2 when installing stair rail systems less than 44 inches wide.”

The agency says that citations under 1910.28(b)(11)(ii) or 1910.29(f)(1)(iii) won’t be issued if stair rail and/or handrail systems are installed before the effective date of a new final rule and comply with the 2021 proposed rule.

Additionally, OSHA says:

The interim guidance includes two illustrative drawings (Figures 1 and 2).


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Original article published by Safety+Health an NSC publication

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