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Relationship
of 1910.147, The Control of Hazardous Energy (Lockout/Tagout) Standard, to Subpart O,
Machinery and Machine Guarding Standards
Normal Production Operations vs. Servicing and/or Maintenance
The Lockout/Tagout standard makes a distinction between two
types of workplace activities: servicing and/or maintenance and normal production
operations. The Lockout/Tagout standard is intended to provide employees with protection
from the unexpected energization, start up, or release of stored energy, while performing
servicing and/or maintenance operations. The machine guarding standards in Subpart O are
intended to provide employee protection against the hazardous energy associated with
normal production operations. However, certain types of servicing and/or maintenance
performed during normal production operations are also subject to the Lockout/Tagout
standard.
Under the Lockout/Tagout standard,
normal production operations are defined as the utilization of a machine or equipment to
perform its intended production function.
Normal production operation is the mode in which an energized
machine or equipment operates to either manufacture a product or perform a function
necessary to assist in the manufacturing process. This mode of operation may present
additional hazards to employees, including points of operation; e.g. ingoing nip points,
crushing hazards due to the motion of the machine or equipment and due to the movement of
the power transmission apparatus. The machine guarding standards establish provisions for
employee protection against hazardous energy and points of operation while the equipment
is energized in order to perform its intended production function. (See 1910.212 and 1910.219).
Employee protection from hazardous energy during normal
production operations is generally accomplished by compliance with applicable machine
guarding standards. However, if a servicing or maintenance operation takes place during
normal production operations, and the employee is required to remove or bypass machine
guarding required by Subpart O, or to place part of his/her body into an area in which
he/she is exposed to the unexpected energization or activation of the equipment, the
protections of the Lockout/Tagout standard would apply. In these circumstances, the
employee performing servicing or maintenance would be subjected to hazards that are not
encountered as part of the normal production operation.
Servicing and/or maintenance is defined as workplace activities,
including installing, setting up, inspecting, adjusting, repairing, replacing,
constructing, modifying, and maintaining and/or servicing machines or equipment. These
activities include lubrication, cleaning or unjamming of machines or equipment, and making
adjustments or tool changes, during which the employee may be exposed to the unexpected
energization or startup of the equipment or release of hazardous energy. Setting up would
include any work performed to prepare a machine or equipment to perform its normal
production operation.
Many servicing and/or maintenance activities require the
machine, equipment, or its components to be disassembled or dismantled. These tasks are
typically performed with the equipment stopped. Other servicing and maintenance activities
would not require the employer to disassemble or dismantle the machine or equipment but
would nonetheless require shutdown of the equipment or machine. This would cause the
associated production process to be discontinued during the servicing and maintenance.
Servicing and/or maintenance activities may expose an employee
to the unexpected energization, start up, or release of stored energy. The Lockout/Tagout
standard establishes provisions to deenergize equipment in such cases and to render all
potentially hazardous energy safe, prior to engaging in servicing and maintenance
activities. These provisions are intended to protect employees from the equipment being
energized or started while servicing and/or maintenance is being performed.
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