Current Best Practices for Preventing Asbestos Exposure Among Brake and Clutch Repair Workers
Brakes Brochure Background
On April 2, 2007 EPA released the final brochure entitled, Current Best Practices for Preventing Asbestos Exposure Among Brake and Clutch Repair Workers. The brochure is intended to provide information for automotive professionals and home mechanics on preventing exposure to brake and clutch dust that may contain asbestos fibers. Read more background information and highlights | en español
You will need Adobe Reader to view some of the files on this page. See EPA's PDF page to learn more.
April 2007
Table of Contents
- Who can this information help?
- What is asbestos and how can it cause health problems?
- Why should mechanics be concerned about asbestos exposure?
- How do I know if I have asbestos brake or clutch components?
- As a professional automotive technician, what work practices must I follow to reduce potential exposures to asbestos?
- As a home mechanic, what can I do to protect myself from asbestos exposure?
- How do I dispose of waste containing asbestos?
- Where can I get additional information?
Trifold Print Version of
this brochure (PDF) (2 pp., 151 K)
Print Version of this brochure (PDF) (6 pp., 492 K)
en español: publicó el folleto Las mejores prácticas para prevenir la exposición al asbesto entre los trabajadores que reparan frenos y embragues
Who can this information
help?
This information can help professional automotive technicians and home
mechanics who repair and replace brakes and clutches. By law, most professional
automotive shops must follow the Occupational Safety and Health Administrations
(OSHA) regulations at 29
CFR 1910.1001 and specifically paragraph (f)(3) and Appendix
F. These are mandatory measures that employers must implement for
automotive brake and clutch inspection, disassembly, repair, and assembly
operations. State and local governments with employees who perform brake
and clutch work in states without OSHA-approved state plans must follow
the identical regulations found under the EPA
Asbestos Worker Protection Rule (PDF) (2 pp., 53 K).
While home mechanics are not required to follow the OSHA work
practices (or the identical requirements under the EPA Asbestos Worker
Protection Rule), by using these practices home mechanics can minimize
potential exposure to asbestos if it is present and thereby reduce their
risk of developing any asbestos-related diseases.
What is asbestos and how can it
cause health problems?
Asbestos, a naturally occurring mineral fiber that is highly heat resistant,
can cause serious health problems when inhaled into the lungs. If products
containing asbestos are disturbed, thin, lightweight asbestos fibers
can be released into the air. Persons breathing the air may breathe
in asbestos fibers. Continued exposure can increase the amount of fibers
deposited in the lung. Fibers embedded in the lung tissue over time
may result in lung diseases such as asbestosis, lung cancer, or mesothelioma.
It can take from 10 to 40 years or more for symptoms of an asbestos-related
condition to appear. Smoking increases the risk of developing illness
from asbestos exposure.
Read basic information on asbestos and its health effects
Why should mechanics be concerned
about asbestos exposure?
Because some, but not all, automotive brakes and clutches available
or in use today may contain asbestos, professional automotive technicians
and home mechanics who repair and replace brakes and clutches may be
exposed to asbestos dust. Brake and clutch dust can be seen when a brake
disk, drum, clutch cover, or the wheel is removed from a car, truck,
or other equipment. There are also many small dust particles that cannot
be seen with the eye. If the brakes contain asbestos, the dust may contain
asbestos fibers, which could be inhaled.
How do I know if I have asbestos
brake or clutch components?
You cannot tell whether brake or clutch components contain asbestos
simply by looking at them. For newer vehicles and parts, auto manufacturers,
auto parts retailers and packaging information, such as labels or Material
Safety Data Sheets (MSDS), may be able to tell you whether or not your
brake or clutch components contain asbestos. For older vehicles,or vehicles
that have had brakes replaced, you may not be able to easily find out
if the brake or clutch components contain asbestos.
As a best practice, OSHA states that mechanics should assume that all brakes have asbestos-type shoes. Worn non-asbestos-type brakes cannot be readily distinguished from asbestos-type shoes. If a mechanic assumes incorrectly that a shoe is a non-asbestos type and fails to utilize brake dust control procedures, increased asbestos exposure may result.
As a professional automotive
technician, what work practices must I follow to reduce potential exposures
to asbestos?
If you work in a commercial automotive shop that performs work on more
than five brake or clutch jobs per week, OSHA regulations require the
use of one of the following work practices or an equivalent method such
as the spray can/solvent system:
- Negative-Pressure Enclosure/HEPA Vacuum System Method: This
type of enclosure and vacuum system has a special box with clear plastic
walls or windows, which fits tightly around a brake or clutch assembly
to prevent asbestos exposure.
- Low Pressure/Wet Cleaning Method: This specially designed low-pressure spray equipment wets down the brake assembly and catches the runoff in a special basin to prevent airborne brake dust from spreading in the work area.
If you work in a commercial automotive shop that performs work on no more than five brake or clutch jobs per week, OSHA regulations allow the following method instead:
- Wet Wipe Method: This method involves using a spray bottle or other device capable of delivering a fine mist of water, or amended water (water with a detergent), at low pressure to wet all brake and clutch parts. The brakes can then be wiped clean with a cloth.
As a home mechanic, what can I do
to protect myself from asbestos exposure?
If you are not able to determine whether your brakes or clutch contain
asbestos, you may want to consider having your brakes or clutch serviced
at a commercial automotive shop. As noted above, OSHA requires special
work practices for professional automotive technicians. If, however,this
is not possible and you do not have access to the equipment professional
automotive shops use to comply with the OSHA work practices, you may want to consider using the wet wipe
method described in this brochure. This method has been deemed acceptable
by OSHA for shops that service no more than five brake or clutch jobs
per week.
Work Practice Don'ts for Home Mechanics: It is recommended that you:
- Do not use compressed air for cleaning. Compressed air blows dust into the air.
- Do not clean brakes or clutches with a dry rag, brush (wet or dry), or garden hose.
- Do not use an ordinary wet/dry vac without a high-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filter to vacuum dust. Invisible particles of brake or clutch dust can stay in the air and on your clothes long after a job is complete.
- Avoid taking work clothing inside the home or tracking dust through the house after performing brake and clutch work to prevent exposing your family to dust particles that may contain asbestos.
Work Practice Do's for Home Mechanics: It is recommended that you:
- Use pre-ground, ready-to-install parts.
- If a brake or clutch lining must be drilled,grooved, cut, beveled, or lathe-turned, use low speeds to keep down the amount of dust created.
- Use machinery with a local exhaust dust collection system equipped with HEPA filtration to prevent dust exposures and work area contamination.
- Change into clean clothes before going inside the home and wash soiled clothes separately.
- Minimize exposure to others by keeping bystanders, as well as food and drinks, away from the work area.
How do I dispose of wastes that
contain asbestos?
Employers of professional automotive technicians must ensure that
they or their waste haulers dispose of waste that contains brake or
clutch dust, including wet rags used to wipe this dust, in accordance
with Federal and local regulations, including the OSHA asbestos waste
disposal regulations. Brake and clutch dust and other asbestos waste
must be collected and disposed of in sealed, impermeable containers
that are appropriately labeled (see 29 CFR 1910.1001(k)(6) and 29 CFR
1910.1001(j)(4)). These regulations do not apply to home mechanics.
For home mechanics, EPA recommends that asbestos waste be double bagged
and disposed of following appropriate local regulations to minimize
exposure. You may contact your state asbestos
representative (PDF) (16 pp., 172 K)
for more disposal and other information.
Where can I get additional information?
OSHA has issued a Safety and Health Information Bulletin on brake and clutch repair. EPA Asbestos Worker Protection Rule regulations (PDF) (2 pp., 53 K) apply to certain state and local government employees. You may also contact Robert Courtnage (courtnage.robert@epa.gov) at 202-566-1081 or Tom Simons (simons.tom@epa.gov) at 202-566-0517 for assistance.
Background about the development of this brochure:
In 2006, EPA released a draft version of the brochure for a 60-day public comment period. After reviewing and, where appropriate, incorporating public comments, EPA has issued the final brochure.
This brochure replaced the existing document entitled, Guidance for Preventing Asbestos Disease Among Auto Mechanics (EPA-560-OPTS-86-002), commonly referred to as the "Gold Book." EPA revised this brochure as part of an effort to bring its asbestos guidance up to date. This brochure replaced the original "Gold Book" which was issued in 1986 prior to official OSHA guidance to brake and clutch workers.
Highlights:
- The brochure summarizes work practices that may be used to avoid asbestos exposure and identifies pertinent Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) requirements for professional automotive mechanics, which are found at 29 CFR 1910.1001 and specifically paragraph (f)(3) and Appendix F.
- These same requirements also are contained in EPAs Worker Protection Rule (PDF) (2 pp., 53 K) found at 40 CFR Part 763, Subpart G, which applies to state and local government employees who perform brake and clutch work in states without OSHA-approved state plans.
- The brochure also provides related information for home mechanics to consider.
- Federal Register Notice for the Final Brochure ([FRL-8109-6])
- Docket Number for the Final Brochure - EPA-HQ-OPPT-2006-0398. The docket for the Final Brochure is available at regulations.gov .
For more information, please contact Robert Courtnage (courtnage.robert@epa.gov) at 202-566-1081 or Tom Simons (simons.tom@epa.gov) at 202-566-0517 for assistance.
En abril del 2007, la Agencia de Protección Ambiental (EPA, por sus siglas en inglés) publicó el folleto "Las mejores prácticas para prevenir la exposición al asbesto entre los trabajadores que reparan frenos y embragues". Este folleto provee información para profesionales de la industria automotriz y mecánicos caseros sobre cómo evitar la exposición al polvo proveniente de los frenos y el embrague que podría contener fibras de asbesto. Este folleto resume diversas prácticas laborales que pueden ser usadas para evitar la exposición al asbesto e identificar los requerimientos de la Administración de Seguridad y Salud Ocupacional (OSHA, por sus siglas en inglés) para los mecánicos de automóviles profesionales. También ofrece información relacionada para los mecánicos caseros. Este folleto reemplaza el documento titulado "Guía para la prevención de enfermedades causadas por asbesto entre mecánicos automotrices" (Guidance for Preventing Asbestos Disease Among Auto Mechanics), EPA-56-OPTS-86-002, comúnmente conocido como "Libro de Oro" (Gold Book).
en español: publicó el folleto Las mejores prácticas para prevenir la exposición al asbesto entre los trabajadores que reparan frenos y embragues