91°F (32.7°C) in the factory I work at.

The law states “all factories must maintain a reasonable temperature and humidity.”

Nowhere is reasonable ever defined. I am mildly infuriated. And very hot lol

Edit: 94° (34.4C) now and this post has made it close to the top of “Hot”… The gods are having a laugh lol

  • SoleInvictus@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    21 hours ago

    I work in environmental, health, and safety, and industrial hygiene, so workplace safety is my jam. You are correct that the regs are shit. Unless you live in one of five states with heat related regulations, you’re really only covered by OSHA’s general duty clause, which can be summed up as “employers have to at least make a good faith effort to do the bare minimum to not hurt their employees”. It sucks.

    For workplace temperature, what you’ll want to look at is wet-bulb temperature, not the dry-bulb reading provided by a thermostat. You can find online calculators that’ll calculate it by temperature and relative humidity. Wet bulb is the measurement accounting for evaporative cooling, so a better approximation of what temperature a human body experiences. Theoretically, a wet-bulb temperature of 35°C (95°F) or more isn’t sustainable and will always lead to heat illness with sustained exposure. Around 30°C (about 85°F) is where we start seeing issues if people don’t consider any steps to avoid heat illness.

    It gets tricky from there as there are a ton of variables to determining a safe temperature, e.g., hydration, environmental radiant heat, cardiovascular health, level of acclimation, nature of the work, body mass, break frequency, access to air conditioned spaces, etc.

    For example, at 94°F, a healthy adult performing moderate physical activity out of the sun (or away from any other heat source) should be fine up to about 75% humidity (so a wet bulb of 85°F), assuming they are dressed appropriately, acclimated to the temperature, remain hydrated, take periodic rest breaks in an air conditioned space (I’d advise 10 minutes on the hour, maybe more). I also recommend a monitoring/emergency response program

    Let me know if I can help at all. I love heat, but working in it is just miserable.

    • Asafum@feddit.nlOP
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      24 hours ago

      Thank you for the detailed response! I’ll have to keep an eye on the wet bulb temperature for future discussions about the heat at work.

      The regulations really are frustrating especially since I’ve reached out to local “representatives” about how vague they are and naturally got no response lol

      • SoleInvictus@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        24 hours ago

        Of course! And seriously, hit me up if you need any EHS advice or some real official sounding verbiage. I got laid off so I suddenly have a lot of free time.

        • Asafum@feddit.nlOP
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          24 hours ago

          I’m sorry to hear that! I definitely appreciate your help, I hope you’re able to find something soon!

    • floquant@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      20 hours ago

      I thought that any wet bulb temperature above your own body’s is cause for concern as sweating basically becomes useless, is that not accurate?

      • SoleInvictus@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        18 hours ago

        You are 100% correct about concern for wet bulb temperature above body temperature, although we start getting concerned at a couple of degrees below body temperature too. The environment has to be a bit cooler so waste heat can be dumped fast enough, otherwise body temperature will begin to increase. Two degrees cooler is barely enough and it’s a miserable experience if you’re doing anything.