Nevada Code § 618.383

Establishment of safety program: Duties of certain employers; requirements of program; training for temporary employees; regulations; exemption
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1. Except as otherwise provided in
subsections 8 and 9, an employer shall establish a written safety program and
carry out the requirements of the program within 90 days after it is
established.
2. The written safety program must
include:
(a) The establishment of a training program for
employees concerning safety in the workplace, particularly in those areas where
there have been recurring injuries or where explosives are manufactured.
(b) If an employer has more than 25 employees, or
if an employers employees are engaged in the manufacture of explosives, the
establishment of a safety committee. The safety committee must include
representatives of employees. If the employees are represented by a labor
organization, the representatives of employees must be selected by the
employees and not appointed by the employer.
3. A representative of employees while
engaging in the business of a safety committee, including attendance at
meetings, authorized inspections or any other activity of the committee, must
be paid by his or her employer as if that employee were engaged in the
employees usual work activities.
4. The written safety program and all
training programs required pursuant to this section must be conducted and made
available in a language and format that is understandable to each employee.
5. The Administrator of the Division shall
adopt regulations establishing the minimum requirements for a written safety
program.
6. The Administrator of the Division shall
develop and provide each employer with a written guide for establishing a
written safety program.
7. An employer who contracts with a
temporary employment service shall provide specialized training concerning
safety for the employees of the service before they begin work at each site or
as soon as possible thereafter.
8. An employer who has 10 or fewer
employees is exempted from the provisions of this section unless the employer
has employees engaged in the manufacture of explosives.
9. For the purposes of this section, an
employer in the mining industry shall not be deemed to be a manufacturer of
explosives.
10. Except as otherwise provided in
subsection 11, as used in this section, explosives means gunpowders, powders
used for blasting, all forms of high explosives, blasting materials, fuses
other than electric circuit breakers, detonators and other detonating agents,
smokeless powders, other explosive or incendiary devices and any chemical
compound, mechanical mixture or device that contains any oxidizing and
combustible units, or other ingredients, in such proportions, quantities or
packing that ignition by fire, friction, concussion, percussion or detonation
of the compound, mixture or device or any part thereof may cause an explosion.
11. For the purposes of this section, an
explosive does not include:
(a) Ammunition for small arms, or any component
thereof;
(b) Black powder commercially manufactured in
quantities that do not exceed 50 pounds, percussion caps, safety and
pyrotechnic fuses, quills, quick and slow matches, and friction primers that
are intended to be used solely for sporting, recreation or cultural purposes:
(1) In an antique firearm, as that term is
defined in 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(16), as that section existed on January 1, 1999;
or
(2) In an antique device which is exempted
from the definition of destructive device pursuant to 18 U.S.C. 921(a)(4),
as that section existed on January 1, 1999; or
(c) Any explosive that is manufactured under the
regulation of a military department of the United States, or that is
distributed to, or possessed or stored by, the military or naval service or any
other agency of the United States, or an arsenal, a navy yard, a depot or any
other establishment owned by or operated on behalf of the United States.

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