[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 49, Volume 4]

[Revised as of October 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 49CFR214.105]



[Page 152-154]

 

                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION

 

       CHAPTER II--FEDERAL RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF 

                             TRANSPORTATION

 

PART 214_RAILROAD WORKPLACE SAFETY--Table of Contents

 

                Subpart B_Bridge Worker Safety Standards

 

Sec.  214.105  Fall protection systems standards and practices.



    (a) General requirements. All fall protection systems required by 

this subpart shall conform to the following:

    (1) Fall protection systems shall be used only for personal fall 

protection.

    (2) Any fall protection system subjected to impact loading shall be 

immediately and permanently removed from service unless fully inspected 

and determined by a competent person to be undamaged and suitable for 

reuse.

    (3) All fall protection system components shall be protected from 

abrasions, corrosion, or any other form of deterioration.

    (4) All fall protection system components shall be inspected prior 

to each use for wear, damage, corrosion, mildew, and other 

deterioration. Defective components shall be permanently removed from 

service.

    (5) Prior to use and after any component or system is changed, 

bridge workers shall be trained in the application limits of the 

equipment, proper hook-up, anchoring and tie-off techniques, methods of 

use, and proper methods of equipment inspection and storage.

    (6) The railroad or railroad contractor shall provide for prompt 

rescue of bridge workers in the event of a fall.

    (7) Connectors shall have a corrosion-resistant finish, and all 

surfaces and edges shall be smooth to prevent damage to interfacing 

parts of the system.

    (8) Connectors shall be drop forged, pressed or formed steel, or 

made of equivalent-strength materials.

    (9) Anchorages, including single- and double-head anchors, shall be 

capable of supporting at least 5,000 pounds per bridge worker attached, 

or shall be designed, installed, and used under supervision of a 

qualified person as part of a complete personal fall protection system 

that maintains a safety factor of at least two.

    (b) Personal fall arrest systems. All components of a personal fall 

arrest system shall conform to the following standards:

    (1) Lanyards and vertical lifelines that tie off one bridge worker 

shall have a minimum breaking strength of 5,000 pounds.

    (2) Self-retracting lifelines and lanyards that automatically limit 

free fall distance to two feet or less shall have components capable of 

sustaining a minimum static tensile load of 3,000 pounds applied to the 

device with the lifeline or lanyard in the fully extended position.

    (3) Self-retracting lifelines and lanyards that do not limit free 

fall distance to two feet or less, ripstitch, and tearing and deformed 

lanyards shall be capable of withstanding 5,000 pounds applied to the 

device with the lifeline or lanyard in the fully extended position.

    (4) Horizontal lifelines shall be designed, installed, and used 

under the supervision of a competent person, as part of a complete 

personal fall arrest system that maintains a safety factor of at least 

two.

    (5) Lifelines shall not be made of natural fiber rope.

    (6) Body belts shall not be used as components of personal fall 

arrest systems.

    (7) The personal fall arrest system shall limit the maximum 

arresting force on a bridge worker to 1,800 pounds when used with a body 

harness.

    (8) The personal fall arrest system shall bring a bridge worker to a 

complete stop and limit maximum deceleration distance a bridge worker 

travels to 3.5 feet.

    (9) The personal fall arrest system shall have sufficient strength 

to withstand twice the potential impact energy of a bridge worker free 

falling a distance of six feet, or the free fall distance permitted by 

the system, whichever is less.

    (10) The personal fall arrest system shall be arranged so that a 

bridge worker cannot free fall more than six feet and cannot contact the 

ground or any lower horizontal surface of the bridge.

    (11) Personal fall arrest systems shall be worn with the attachment 

point of the body harness located in the center of the wearer's back 

near shoulder level, or above the wearer's head.

    (12) When vertical lifelines are used, each bridge worker shall be 

provided with a separate lifeline.

    (13) Devices used to connect to a horizontal lifeline that may 

become a



[[Page 153]]



vertical lifeline shall be capable of locking in either direction.

    (14) Dee-rings and snap-hooks shall be capable of sustaining a 

minimum tensile load of 3,600 pounds without cracking, breaking, or 

taking permanent deformation.

    (15) Dee-rings and snap-hooks shall be capable of sustaining a 

minimum tensile load of 5,000 pounds.

    (16) Snap-hooks shall not be connected to each other.

    (17) Snap-hooks shall be dimensionally compatible with the member to 

which they are connected to prevent unintentional disengagement, or 

shall be a locking snap-hook designed to prevent unintentional 

disengagement.

    (18) Unless of a locking type, snap-hooks shall not be engaged:

    (i) Directly, next to a webbing, rope, or wire rope;

    (ii) To each other;

    (iii) To a dee-ring to which another snap-hook or other connector is 

attached;

    (iv) To a horizontal lifeline; or

    (v) To any object that is incompatibly shaped or dimensioned in 

relation to the snap-hook so that unintentional disengagement could 

occur.

    (c) Safety net systems. Use of safety net systems shall conform to 

the following standards and practices:

    (1) Safety nets shall be installed as close as practicable under the 

walking/working surface on which bridge workers are working, but shall 

not be installed more than 30 feet below such surface.

    (2) If the distance from the working surface to the net exceeds 30 

feet, bridge workers shall be protected by personal fall arrest systems.

    (3) The safety net shall be installed such that any fall from the 

working surface to the net is unobstructed.

    (4) Except as provided in this section, safety nets and net 

installations shall be drop-tested at the jobsite after initial 

installation and before being used as a fall protection system, whenever 

relocated, after major repair, and at six-month intervals if left in one 

place. The drop-test shall consist of a 400-pound bag of sand 30 inches, 

plus or minus two inches, in diameter dropped into the net from the 

highest (but not less than 3\1/2\ feet) working surface on which bridge 

workers are to be protected.

    (i) When the railroad or railroad contractor demonstrates that a 

drop-test is not feasible and, as a result, the test is not performed, 

the railroad or railroad contractor, or designated competent person, 

shall certify that the net and its installation are in compliance with 

the provisions of this section by preparing a certification record prior 

to use of the net.

    (ii) The certification shall include an identification of the net, 

the date it was determined that the net was in compliance with this 

section, and the signature of the person making this determination. Such 

person's signature shall certify that the net and its installation are 

in compliance with this section. The most recent certification for each 

net installation shall be available at the jobsite where the subject net 

is located.

    (5) Safety nets and their installations shall be capable of 

absorbing an impact force equal to that produced by the drop test 

specified in this section.

    (6) The safety net shall be installed such that there is no contact 

with surfaces or structures below the net when subjected to an impact 

force equal to the drop test specified in this section.

    (7) Safety nets shall extend outward from the outermost projection 

of the work surface as follows:

    (i) When the vertical distance from the working level to the 

horizontal plane of the net is 5 feet or less, the minimum required 

horizontal distance of the outer edge of the net beyond the edge of the 

working surface is 8 feet.

    (ii) When the vertical distance from the working level to the 

horizontal plane of the net is 5 feet, but less than 10 feet, the 

minimum required horizontal distance of the outer edge of the net beyond 

the edge of the working surface is 10 feet.

    (iii) When the vertical distance from the working level to the 

horizontal plane of the net is more than 10 feet, the minimum required 

horizontal distance of the outer edge of the net beyond the edge of the 

working surface is 13 feet.

    (8) Defective nets shall not be used. Safety nets shall be inspected 

at least once a week for mildew, wear, damage,



[[Page 154]]



and other deterioration. Defective components shall be removed 

permanently from service.

    (9) Safety nets shall be inspected after any occurrence that could 

affect the integrity of the safety net system.

    (10) Tools, scraps, or other materials that have fallen into the 

safety net shall be removed as soon as possible, and at least before the 

next work shift.

    (11) Each safety net shall have a border rope for webbing with a 

minimum breaking strength of 5,000 pounds.

    (12) The maximum size of each safety net mesh opening shall not 

exceed 36 square inches and shall not be longer than 6 inches on any 

side measured center-to-center of mesh ropes or webbing. All mesh 

crossing shall be secured to prevent enlargement of the mesh opening.

    (13) Connections between safety net panels shall be as strong as 

integral net components and shall be spaced not more than 6 inches 

apart.



[67 FR 1906, Jan. 15, 2002; 67 FR 11055, Mar. 12, 2002]