[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 29, Volume 3]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 29CFR570.58]



[Page 268-269]

 

                             TITLE 29--LABOR

 

         CHAPTER V--WAGE AND HOUR DIVISION, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

 

PART 570_CHILD LABOR REGULATIONS, ORDERS AND STATEMENTS OF INTERPRETATION

--Table of Contents

 

   Subpart E_Occupations Particularly Hazardous for the Employment of 

Minors Between 16 and 18 Years of Age or Detrimental to Their Health or 

                               Well-Being

 

Sec.  570.58  Occupations involved in the operation of power-driven 

hoisting apparatus (Order 7).



    (a) Finding and declaration of fact. The following occupations 

involved in the operation of power-driven hoisting apparatus are 

particularly hazardous for minors between 16 and 18 years of age:

    (1) Work of operating an elevator, crane, derrick, hoist, or high-

lift truck, except operating an unattended automatic operation passenger 

elevator or an electric or air-operated hoist not exceeding one ton 

capacity.

    (2) Work which involves riding on a manlift or on a freight 

elevator, except a freight elevator operated by an assigned operator.

    (3) Work of assisting in the operation of a crane, derrick, or hoist 

performed by crane hookers, crane chasers, hookers-on, riggers, rigger 

helpers, and like occupations.

    (b) Definitions. As used in this section:

    (1) The term elevator shall mean any power-driven hoisting or 

lowering mechanism equipped with a car or platform which moves in guides 

in a substantially vertical direction. The term shall include both 

passenger and freight elevators (including portable elevators or tiering 

machines), but shall not include dumbwaiters.

    (2) The term crane shall mean a power-driven machine for lifting and 

lowering a load and moving it horizontally, in which the hoisting 

mechanism is an integral part of the machine. The term shall include all 

types of cranes, such as cantilever gantry, crawler, gantry, hammerhead, 

ingot-pouring, jib, locomotive, motor-truck, overhead traveling, pillar 

jib, pintle, portal, semi-gantry, semi-portal, storage bridge, tower, 

walking jib, and wall cranes.

    (3) The term derrick shall mean a power-driven apparatus consisting 

of a mast or equivalent members held at the top by guys or braces, with 

or without a boom, for use with a hoisting mechanism or operating ropes. 

The term shall include all types of derricks, such as A-frame, breast, 

Chicago boom, gin-pole, guy and stiff-leg derrick.

    (4) The term hoist shall mean a power-driven apparatus for raising 

or lowering a load by the application of a pulling force that does not 

include a car or platform running in guides. The term shall include all 

types of hoists, such as base mounted electric, clevis suspension, hook 

suspension, monorail,



[[Page 269]]



overhead electric, simple drum and trolley suspension hoists.

    (5) The term high-lift truck shall mean a power-driven industrial 

type of truck used for lateral transportation that is equipped with a 

power-operated lifting device usually in the form of a fork or platform 

capable of tiering loaded pallets or skids one above the other. Instead 

of a fork or platform, the lifting device may consist of a ram, scoop, 

shovel, crane, revolving fork, or other attachments for handling 

specific loads. The term shall mean and include highlift trucks known 

under such names as fork lifts, fork trucks, fork-lift trucks, tiering 

trucks, or stacking trucks, but shall not mean low-lift trucks or low-

lift platform trucks that are designed for the transportation of but not 

the tiering of material.

    (6) The term manlift shall mean a device intended for the conveyance 

of persons which consists of platforms or brackets mounted on, or 

attached to, an endless belt, cable, chain or similar method of 

suspension; such belt, cable or chain operating in a substantially 

vertical direction and being supported by and driven through pulleys, 

sheaves or sprockets at the top and bottom.

    (c) Exception. (1) This section shall not prohibit the operation of 

an automatic elevator and an automatic signal operation elevator 

provided that the exposed portion of the car interior (exclusive of 

vents and other necessary small openings), the car door, and the 

hoistway doors are constructed of solid surfaces without any opening 

through which a part of the body may extend; all hoistway openings at 

floor level have doors which are interlocked with the car door so as to 

prevent the car from starting until all such doors are closed and 

locked; the elevator (other than hydraulic elevators) is equipped with a 

device which will stop and hold the car in case of overspeed or if the 

cable slackens or breaks; and the elevator is equipped with upper and 

lower travel limit devices which will normally bring the car to rest at 

either terminal and a final limit switch which will prevent the movement 

in either direction and will open in case of excessive over travel by 

the car.

    (2) For the purpose of this exception the term automatic elevator 

shall mean a passenger elevator, a freight elevator, or a combination 

passenger-freight elevator, the operation of which is controlled by 

pushbuttons in such a manner that the starting, going to the landing 

selected, leveling and holding, and the opening and closing of the car 

and hoistway doors are entirely automatic.

    (3) For the purpose of this exception, the term automatic signal 

operation elevator shall mean an elevator which is started in response 

to the operation of a switch (such as a lever or pushbutton) in the car 

which when operated by the operator actuates a starting device that 

automatically closes the car and hoistway doors--from this point on, the 

movement of the car to the landing selected, leveling and holding when 

it gets there, and the opening of the car and hoistway doors are 

entirely automatic.



[16 FR 7008, July 20, 1951, as amended at 20 FR 6386, Aug. 31, 1955. 

Redesignated at 28 FR 1634, Feb. 21, 1963, and amended at 28 FR 3449, 

Apr. 9, 1963; 32 FR 15479, Nov. 7, 1967. Redesignated and amended at 36 

FR 25156, Dec. 29, 1971]