Safety Articles

NFPA 70E – The Arc-Rated Clothing as Daily Wear Conundrum

Apr 8, 2024 | 70E - Electrical Safety

During the last 20 years I’ve taught quite a few courses on NFPA 70E. By far, the biggest area of pushback and resistance deals with my recommendation that qualified persons wear hazard risk category (HRC) 2 arc-rated flame resistant (FR) clothing as daily wear. The common complaint is that arc-rated clothing is hot and employees don’t want to wear long-sleeve shirts during Summer months. Frequently, I have students remark that they rarely work on exposed energized equipment. Many clients comments that whenever they work on exposed energized equipment they will have their workers don the arc-rated clothing to perform the task and then will remove the  clothing once the task is completed. If you have qualified persons, are you aware the following tasks typically require FR arc-rated clothing:

  • Troubleshooting with an electrical multimeter
  • Performing verification of deenergized condition with a multimeter
  • Removal of bolted covers to expose bare, energized electrical conductors and circuit parts   

In addition, although circuit breaker or fused switch operation does not typically require arc-rated clothing, NFPA 70E still requires non melting long sleeve shirt and pants.

Every time a qualified person perform a HRC task 1 and above, arc-rated clothing is required. Even resetting a circuit breaker will require a long sleeve shirt and pants. I don’t believe it is practical that a qualified person will don the arc-rated clothing every time it is required. What if a worker is troubleshooting an HVAC unit on the roof? How about troubleshooting a downed machine while the plant is losing thousands of dollar an hour in lost production and the arc-rated clothing is 100 yards away?

Wearing arc-rated FR HRC 2 clothing as a daily uniform helps ensure qualified persons are protected from arc flashes. Otherwise, you will likely face an administrative nightmare trying to enforce the “don as you go” FR policy.

Jon