29 CFR §1915.508
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)The employer must train employees in the applicable requirements of this section:
- (b)Employee training. The employer must ensure that all employees are trained on:
- (1)The emergency alarm signals, including system discharge alarms and employee evacuation alarms; and
- (2)The primary and secondary evacuation routes that employees must use in the event of a fire in the workplace. While all vessels and vessel sections must have a primary evacuation route, a secondary evacuation route is not required when impracticable.
- (c)Additional training requirements for employees expected to fight incipient stage fires. The employer must ensure that employees expected to fight incipient stage fires are trained on the following:
- (1)The general principles of using fire extinguishers or hose lines, the hazards involved with incipient firefighting, and the procedures used to reduce these hazards;
- (2)The hazards associated with fixed and portable fire protection systems that employees may use or to which they may be exposed during discharge of those systems; and
- (3)The activation and operation of fixed and portable fire protection systems that the employer expects employees to use in the workplace.
- (d)Additional training requirements for shipyard employees designated for fire response. The employer must:
- (1)Have a written training policy stating that fire response employees must be trained and capable of carrying out their duties and responsibilities at all times;
- (2)Keep written standard operating procedures that address anticipated emergency operations and update these procedures as necessary;
- (3)Review fire response employee training programs and hands-on sessions before they are used in fire response training to make sure that fire response employees are protected from hazards associated with fire response training;
- (4)Provide training for fire response employees that ensures they are capable of carrying out their duties and responsibilities under the employer's standard operating procedures;
- (5)Train new fire response employees before they engage in emergency operations;
- (6)At least quarterly, provide training on the written operating procedures to fire response employees who are expected to fight fires;
- (7)Use qualified instructors to conduct the training;
- (8)Conduct any training that involves live fire response exercises in accordance with NFPA 1403-2002 Standard on Live Fire Training Evolutions (incorporated by reference, see § 1915.5);
- (9)Conduct semi-annual drills according to the employer's written procedures for fire response employees that cover site-specific operations, occupancies, buildings, vessels and vessel sections, and fire-related hazards; and
- (10)Prohibit the use of smoke generating devices that create a dangerous atmosphere in training exercises.
- (e)Additional training requirements for fire watch duty.
- (1)The employer must ensure that each fire watch is trained by an instructor with adequate fire watch knowledge and experience to cover the items as follows:
- (i)Before being assigned to fire watch duty;
- (ii)Whenever there is a change in operations that presents a new or different hazard;
- (iii)Whenever the employer has reason to believe that the fire watch's knowledge, skills, or understanding of the training previously provided is inadequate; and
- (iv)Annually.
- (2)The employer must ensure that each employee who stands fire watch duty is trained in:
- (i)The basics of fire behavior, the different classes of fire and of extinguishing agents, the stages of fire, and methods for extinguishing fires;
- (ii)Extinguishing live fire scenarios whenever allowed by local and federal law;
- (iii)The recognition of the adverse health effects that may be caused by exposure to fire;
- (iv)The physical characteristics of the hot work area;
- (v)The hazards associated with fire watch duties;
- (vi)The personal protective equipment (PPE) needed to perform fire watch duties safely;
- (vii)The use of PPE;
- (viii)The selection and use of any fire extinguishers and fire hoses likely to be used by a fire watch in the work area;
- (ix)The location and use of barriers;
- (x)The means of communication designated by the employer for fire watches;
- (xi)When and how to start fire alarm procedures; and
- (xii)The employer's evacuation plan.
- (3)The employer must ensure that each fire watch is trained to alert others to exit the space whenever:
- (1)The employer must ensure that each fire watch is trained by an instructor with adequate fire watch knowledge and experience to cover the items as follows:
- (f)Records. The employer must keep records that demonstrate that employees have been trained as required by paragraphs (a) through (e) of this section.
- (1)The employer must ensure that the records include the employee's name; the trainer's name; the type of training; and the date(s) on which the training took place.
- (2)The employer must keep each training record for one year from the time it was made or until it is replaced with a new training record, whichever is shorter, and make it available for inspection and copying by OSHA on request.