puckman
Senior Member
- Location
- ridgewood, n.j.
I may have asked this question awhile back but it came up again in a meeting and i wasn't sure of the answer. Is there a osha rule or nfpa rule that the person giving the company electrical safety plan should have to be a person related to the field in some way?
We had the safety chief and a company guy who is not in the electrical field in any way [ he does carry a multimeter as part of his job ] give the training and using nfpa 70e as part of thier rules on working with electricity. A big part was if you work with the power off everything is ok. The field training was being taken to a Mcc room and open a bucket and test for power inside the bucket to learn how to test for power properly. Thats the field training. Does osha require more proof of training to confirm a " qualified employee"?
We had the safety chief and a company guy who is not in the electrical field in any way [ he does carry a multimeter as part of his job ] give the training and using nfpa 70e as part of thier rules on working with electricity. A big part was if you work with the power off everything is ok. The field training was being taken to a Mcc room and open a bucket and test for power inside the bucket to learn how to test for power properly. Thats the field training. Does osha require more proof of training to confirm a " qualified employee"?