Oklahoma Code § 45-915

Title 45. Mines And Mining: Electricity - Rules and procedures
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
The following rules and procedures shall be complied with in
dealing with electricity:
1.  Circuits shall be protected against excessive overloads by
fuses or circuit breakers of the correct type and capacity;
2.  Powerlines and telephone circuits shall be protected against
short circuits and lightning;
3.  Electric equipment and circuits shall be provided with
switches or other controls.  Such switches or controls shall be of
approved design and construction and shall be properly installed;
4.  Individual overload protection or short-circuit protection
shall be provided for the trailing cables of mobile equipment;
5.  Power wires and cables shall have adequate current-carrying
capacity and shall be protected from mechanical injury;
6.  Neither crawler-mounted nor rubber-tired equipment shall run
over trailing cables unless the cables are properly bridged or
otherwise protected;
7.  Distribution boxes shall be provided with disconnect
switches;
8.  Trailing cable and power cable connections to junction boxes
shall not be made or broken under load;
9.  Power wires and cables shall be insulated adequately where
they pass into or out of electrical compartments;
10.  Power wires and cables which present a fire hazard shall be
well installed on acceptable insulators;
11.  Where metallic tools or equipment can come in contact with
bare power lines, the lines shall be guarded or de-energized;
12.  Telephone and low potential electric signal wires shall be
protected from contacting energized power lines;
13.  High potential transmission cables shall be covered,
insulated or placed according to acceptable electrical codes to
prevent contact with low potential circuits;
14.  The potential on bare signal wires accessible to personal
contact should not exceed thirty (30) volts;

15.  Splices in power cables, including ground conductor, where
provided, shall be:
a.  mechanically strong with adequate electrical
conductivity,
b.  effectively insulated and sealed to exclude
moisture, and
c.  provided with mechanical protection and
electrical conductivity as near as possible to that of the original;
16.  Shovel trailing cables shall not be moved with the shovel
dipper unless cable slings or sleds are used;
17.  Energized high potential cables shall be handled with
insulated hooks or tongs;
18.  Electrical equipment shall be de-energized before work is
done on such equipment.  Switches shall be locked out and suitable
warning signs posted by the individuals who are to do the work;
locks shall be removed only by authorized persons;
19.  Power circuits shall be de-energized before work is done
on such circuits unless hot line tools are used.  Switches shall be
locked out and suitable warning signs posted by the individuals who
are to do the work; locks shall be removed only by authorized
persons;
20.  Principal power switches shall be labeled to show which
units they control;
21.  At least three (3) feet of clearance shall be provided
around all parts of stationary electric equipment or switch gear
where access or travel is necessary;
22.  Dry wooden platforms, insulating mats or other
electrically nonconductive material shall be kept in place at all
switchboards and power control switches where shock hazards exist.
However, metal plates on which a person normally would stand, plates
which are kept at the same potential as the grounded metal
noncurrent carrying parts of the power switches to be operated may
be used;
23.  Suitable danger signs shall be posted at all major
electrical installations;
24.  Areas containing major electrical installations shall be
entered only by authorized personnel;
25.  Electrical connections and resistor grids that are
difficult or impractical to insulate shall be guarded unless
protection is provided by location;
26.  Reverse-current protection shall be provided at storage
battery charging stations;
27.  All metal enclosing or encasing electrical circuits shall
be grounded or provided with equivalent protection.  This
requirement does not apply to battery-operated equipment;
28.  Metal fencing and metal buildings enclosing transformers
and switch gear shall be grounded;

29.  Frame grounding or equivalent protection shall be provided
for mobile equipment powered through trailing cables;
30.  Continuity and resistance of grounding systems shall be
tested immediately after installation;
31.  Electric equipment and wiring shall be inspected by a
certified person as often as necessary to assure safe operating
conditions;
32.  When a potentially dangerous condition is found it shall
be corrected before equipment or wiring is energized;
33.  Inspection and cover plates on electrical equipment shall
be kept in place at all times except during testing or repairs;
34.  Circuits shall be de-energized before fuses are removed or
replaced;
35.  Fuse tongs or hot line tools shall be used when fuses are
removed or replaced in medium or high voltage circuits;
36.  Trailing cables shall be clamped to machines in a manner
to protect the cables from damage and to prevent strain on the
electrical connections;
37.  Surplus trailing cables to shovels, cranes and similar
equipment shall be stored in cable boots or on reels mounted on the
equipment or otherwise protected from mechanical damage;
38.  Operating controls shall be installed so that they can be
operated without danger of contact with energized conductors;
39.  Equipment with booms or masts which are not properly
protected shall not be operated where the booms or masts can come
within ten (10) feet of an energized overhead power line;
40.  Overhead high potential power lines shall be installed as
specified by the National Electrical Safety Code;
41.  When equipment must be moved under energized power lines
and the clearance is less than ten (10) feet, the power lines shall
be de-energized or other precautions shall be taken;
42.  Guy wires from poles supporting high voltage transmission
lines shall be securely connected to the system ground or be
provided with insulators installed near the pole end;
43.  Telegraph, telephone or signal wires shall not be
installed on the same crossarm with power conductors.  When carried
on poles supporting power lines, they shall be installed as
specified by the National Electrical Safety Code;
44.  Transformers shall be totally enclosed or shall be placed
at least fifteen (15) feet above the ground, twenty (20) feet above
driveways and haulage ways, or installed in a transformer house, or
surrounded by a subtantial fence at least six (6) feet high and at
least three (3) feet from any energized parts, casings or wiring;
45.  Transformer enclosures shall be kept locked against
unauthorized entry; and
46.  Tools and supplies shall be carried in the hands and not
on the shoulders when men travel near bare power conductors.

‹ Prev All Oklahoma sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.