Arizona task force releases recommendations on protecting workers from heat

Phoenix — The Industrial Commission of Arizona has published guidelines on how employers can protect workers from heat-related illnesses and injuries.

The guidelines offer best practices for written prevention plans, water, shade, rest breaks, acclimatization and training.

They also list workplaces and operations that are exempt from the recommendations:

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  • Incidental heat exposure during which an employee isn’t required to perform work activities in heat for more than 15 minutes in any 60-minute period.
  • All emergency operations that are directly involved in the protection of life/property or the restoration of essential services, such as evacuation, rescue, medical, structural firefighting, law enforcement, utilities and communications, when employees are engaged in those operations.
  • Buildings and structures that have a mechanical ventilation system that keeps the heat index below 80° F.

The recommendations were developed by the state’s Workplace Heat Safety Task Force, a group represented by public and private sector employers, labor organizations, and occupational safety and health experts. In May, Gov. Katie Hobbs (D) signed an Executive Order to establish the task force.

“Keeping hardworking Arizonans safe on the job has been a top priority of my administration since Day 1,” Hobbs said in a Dec. 31 press release. “These commonsense recommendations focusing on access to water, shade and rest will keep countless Arizonans out of harm’s way as they put food on the table and push our economy forward, including during the hot Arizona summers.

“I’m grateful to the 24 members of our Workplace Heat Safety Task Force from the labor, business and advocacy communities who came together to find consensus and deliver best practices that any employer can implement.”

As directed by the EO, the Arizona Division of Occupational Safety and Health will publish data annually on “heat-related claims, complaints and citations to evaluate the effectiveness of the recommendations, implementation and education efforts,” the release states. Additionally, ADOSH will make heat plan templates available for download.

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