Bill113th Congress

H.R. 691

Worker Protection Against Combustible Dust Explosions and Fires Act of 2013

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Introduced
Feb 14, 2013
Origin Chamber
House
Policy Area
Labor and Employment
Latest Action
Apr 23, 2013

Sponsor

Rep. Miller, George [D-CA-11]

Democrat·CA-11
Bioguide ID: M000725
First Name: GEORGE
Last Name: MILLER
By Request: N
2
Cosponsors
1
Committees
4
Actions
0
Amendments
0
Related Bills
6
Subjects
1
Summaries
3
Titles
1
Text Versions

Bill Details

Update Date
Nov 15, 2022
Origin Chamber
House
Bill Type
HR
Bill Number
691
Congress
113
Introduced Date
Feb 14, 2013
Policy Area
Labor and Employment
Is Law
No
Apr 23, 2013Committee

Referred to the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections.

Source: House committee actions

Feb 14, 2013IntroReferralH11100

Referred to the House Committee on Education and the Workforce.

Source: House floor actions

Feb 14, 2013IntroReferralIntro-H

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Feb 14, 2013IntroReferral1000

Introduced in House

Source: Library of Congress

Introduced in House· Feb 14, 20130

Worker Protection Against Combustible Dust Explosions and Fires Act of 2013 - Requires the Secretary of Labor to promulgate an interim final standard regulating occupational exposure to combustible dust hazards, which shall apply to manufacturing, processing, blending, conveying, repackaging, and handling of combustible particulate solids and their dusts (including organic dusts, plastics, sulfur, wood, rubber, furniture, textiles, pesticides, pharmaceuticals, fibers, dyes, coal, metals, and fossil fuels), but shall not apply to processes already covered by the occupational safety and health standard on grain facilities.

Requires such standard to be based on portions of the National Fire Protection Association Standards in effect upon enactment of this Act that: (1) apply to existing facilities, or (2) call for source and dust emission control technologies.

Requires such standard also to provide requirements for: (1) a hazard assessment to identify, evaluate, and control combustible dust hazards; (2) a written program that includes provisions for hazardous dust inspection, testing, hot work, ignition control, and housekeeping; (3) engineering controls, administrative controls, and operating procedures; (4) workplace inspection and housekeeping to prevent accumulation of combustible dust in places of employment in depths that can present explosion, deflagration, or other fire hazards, including safe methods of dust removal; (5) participation of employees and their representatives in hazard assessment, development of and compliance with the written program, incident investigation, and other elements of hazard management; and (6) providing safety and health information and annual training to managers and employees and their representatives.

Requires the interim final standard to take effect 30 days after its issuance, and remain in effect until a final standard becomes effective, except that it may include a reasonable phase-in period for implementation of required engineering controls.

Requires the Secretary to issue: (1) a proposed rule for regulating combustible dust explosions that includes the major elements contained in the interim final standard, and (2) a final rule three years after issuance of a proposed rule.

Education and the Workforce Committee

House· Standing
Administrative law and regulatory proceduresAir qualityDepartment of LaborFiresLabor standardsWorker safety and health

Introduced in House

Feb 14, 2013

Worker Protection Against Combustible Dust Explosions and Fires Act of 2013 — Informed