Test and Tag Regulations
New South Wales
The electrical test and tag legislation in NSW has recently changed. On Friday 28 April 2006 Workcover NSW published the
Occupational Health and
Safety Amendment (Electrical Equipment) Regulation 2006 to amends the
previous legislative contained in the
Occupational Health and
Safety Regulation 2001.
This amending regulation now outlines working environments where
testing and tagging of electrical equipment is required.
Clause 64
(2)(a2) 1 ‘all electrical articles that are used in
construction work are regularly inspected, tested and maintained by a
competent person to ensure they are safe for use if the articles are
supplied with electricity through an electrical outlet socket’
Clause 64
(2)(a3) 1 ‘all electrical articles that are supplied with
electricity through an electrical outlet socket that are at a place of
work where the safe operation of the electrical article could be
affected by a hostile operating environment are regularly inspected,
tested and maintained by a competent person to ensure they are safe for
use’
Clause 64
(3) 1 ‘In this clause, hostile operating environment means
an operating environment at a place of work where an electrical article
is in its normal use subjected to operating conditions that are likely
to result in damage to the article, and, for example, includes an
operating environment that may:
(a) cause mechanical damage to the article, or
(b) expose the article to moisture, heat, vibration, corrosive
substances or dust that is likely to result in damage to the article.’
Many
people interpret this as all plug-in electrical equipment must be
inspected, tested and tagged. This is not the case, some plug-in
electrical equipment present as a low risk and will not need such a
stringent testing procedure. A risk assessment must be carried out on
electrical equipment that is not placed in a hostile working
environment. Once the risk assessment is carried out a range of control
measures to manage the safe operation of these electrical appliances
can be used. The Workcover NSW publication entitled
Electrical Equipment Risk Assessment outlines the procedure to
undertake a risk assessment.
All
electrical equipment in hostile environments must be tested and tagged
by a competent person. A competent person is someone who has acquired
the knowledge and skill to perform the
task. This knowledge can be
obtained through training, qualification or experience. All tests must
be conducted in accordance with the provisions of the Australian and
New Zealand standard
AS/NZ 3760: 2003. All unsafe appliances must be repaired, replaced
or permanently removed from use.
Clause
65(1)1 ‘An employer must ensure that a record is made and
kept of all inspections and tests made and maintenance carried out on
electrical articles and electrical installations required by this
Part’. The persons who
performed the test, the date on which the test was preformed, the date
of the next test, and the outcome of the test must
all be recorded.
It is
also up to the employer, as the person authorizing the work, to make
sure that the testing and tagging program is adequate for the needs of
the workplace.
Testing
Construction Electrical Equipment
Due to
the hazardous nature of construction work regular testing and tagging
of electrical equipment must be carried out in accordance with the
requirements outlined in the Work Cover NSW
Code of Practice – Electrical practices for construction
Clause
14.12 ‘Ensure that all flexible extension cords, portable
tools and electrical plant supplied at a voltage above 32 volts (extra
low voltage) are inspected, tested and tagged as per Clause 14.7 and
14.8 by a licensed electrician at regular monthly intervals or at
regular 3 monthly intervals for single unit dwelling house sites.
Record details of the inspections and tests in a book kept on site or
at the owner’s premises.’
All
electrical equipment including those keep in sheds and site offices
must be tested and tagged in accordance to the
Code of Practice – Electrical practices for construction and a durable non metallic tag must be applied. A different
colour tag must be used for each month as follows:
January -
Red
February - Blue
March - Orange
April - Green
May - White
June - Yellow
July - Blue
August - Green
September - Red
October - Yellow
November - Orange
December – White
The tag
must include the date of the inspection, the plant number or inspection
number of the item inspected, the name of the testing company.
Advice
to Employees
All
workplace should be performing risk assessment on electrical equipment.
And if it is found that the electrical equipment is placed into a
hostile environment, they shall be tested and tagged in accordance to
AS/NZ 3760: 2003. If this is not the case in your workplace, you as
an employee, should approach your employer and request that this be
done as soon as possible. If it is not done, then the employer is
breaching his/her duty under Clause 641.
Quotes
1
Occupational Health and Safety Amendment (Electrical
Equipment) Regulation 2006
2
Code of Practice – Electrical practices for construction