OSHA’s subpart CC,
Cranes and Derricks in Construction, requires riggers to be qualified to
perform their job.
Qualified rigger
required
Employers must use
qualified riggers during hoisting activities for assembly and disassembly work.
Additionally, qualified riggers are required whenever workers are within the
fall zone and hooking, unhooking, or guiding a load, or doing the initial
connection of a load to a component or structure.
Qualified rigger
criteria
A qualified rigger is
a rigger who meets the criteria for a qualified person. Employers must
determine whether a person is qualified to perform specific rigging tasks. Each
qualified rigger may have different credentials or experience. A qualified
rigger is a person that:
· Possesses a recognized degree, certificate, or
professional standing; or
· Has extensive knowledge, training, and experience; and
· Can successfully demonstrate the ability to solve
problems related to rigging loads.
The person designated
as the qualified rigger must have the ability to properly rig the load for a
particular job. It does not mean that a rigger must be qualified to do every
type of rigging job.
Each load that
requires rigging has unique properties that can range from the simple to the
complex. For example, a rigger may have extensive experience in rigging
structural components and other equipment to support specific construction
activities. Such experience may have been gained over many years.
However, this
experience does not automatically qualify the rigger to rig unstable, unusually
heavy, or eccentric loads that may require a tandem lift, multiple-lifts, or
use of custom rigging equipment. In essence, employers must make sure the
person can do the rigging work needed for the exact types of loads and lifts
for a particular job with the equipment and rigging that will be used for that
job.
Do qualified riggers
need to be trained or certified?
Riggers do need to be
properly trained, but they do not have to be certified by an accredited
organization or assessed by a third party. Employers may choose to use a third
party entity to assess the qualifications of the rigger candidate, but they are
not required to do so.
Is a certified crane
operator a qualified rigger?
A certified crane
operator does not necessarily meet the requirements of a qualified rigger.
Determining whether a person is a qualified rigger is based on the nature of
the load, lift, and equipment used to hoist that load plus that person’s
knowledge and experience. A certified/qualified crane operator may meet the requirements
of a qualified rigger, depending on the operator’s knowledge and experience
with rigging.
This information is provided by: Assurance Agency
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