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Project MgmtSafetyeasy20% of exam part

During electrical work, a lockout/tagout procedure is being implemented. Who is authorized to remove a lockout device?

Correct Answer

C) The person who applied the lockout device

Only the person who applied a lockout device may remove it. This ensures that the worker who is protected by the lockout maintains control over their own safety throughout the procedure.

Answer Options
A
The supervisor who authorized the work
B
Any qualified electrician
C
The person who applied the lockout device
D
The safety officer

Why This Is the Correct Answer

OSHA's lockout/tagout (LOTO) standard 29 CFR 1910.147 specifically requires that only the authorized employee who applied a lockout or tagout device may remove it. This fundamental safety principle ensures personal accountability and prevents unauthorized removal that could endanger workers. The rule protects the individual worker by giving them exclusive control over their own safety devices. This prevents situations where someone else might mistakenly remove a lockout device while the original worker is still in danger.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: The supervisor who authorized the work

While supervisors may authorize the work and oversee LOTO procedures, they cannot remove lockout devices applied by other workers. This would violate OSHA standards and compromise worker safety by removing personal control from the protected employee.

Option B: Any qualified electrician

Even qualified electricians cannot remove lockout devices applied by others. Electrical qualification does not override the personal accountability requirement of LOTO procedures - only the person who applied the device understands their specific work status and safety needs.

Option D: The safety officer

Safety officers may oversee and enforce LOTO procedures, but they cannot remove lockout devices applied by individual workers. Their role is to ensure compliance with procedures, not to override the personal control aspect of worker safety.

Memory Technique

Think 'My Lock, My Key, My Life' - only the person who applied the lockout device has the authority to remove it because it's protecting their own safety.

Reference Hint

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.147 - The Control of Hazardous Energy (Lockout/Tagout) standard, specifically section 1910.147(e)(3)

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