My Friday Question,

NFPA Codes, law or not? Officially the answer is, "No, these are not laws."

I recently saw a clarification stating:

"*As a national consensus safety standard, NFPA 70 is not a law and it has
not been incorporated into the Code of Federal Regulations. Therefore,
compliance is not deemed mandatory. Even so, OSHA has cited NFPA 70 in
cases where lack of compliance has resulted in a workplace accident*."


The National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) is a nonprofit organization
and not a government entity. In the USA, possibly the best known published
document is the NFPA 70 which is the National Electric Code or NEC ®. And
indeed, this code has been translated and adopted in other countries in
places like Latin America
<https://www.nfpa.org/NEC/NEC-adoption-and-use/NEC-adoption-and-use-in-Latin-America>.
Nevertheless, in my view, the whole system is bordering on becoming a
legal requirement, especially at the local level where Authorities Having
Jurisdiction (AHJs) adopt these into their local city and county codes.

Occasionally a discussion is raised on electrical forums where someone
wants to point out that in this country any code which is officially
mandated law must be freely available for public use. NFPA does indeed
offer a "free view" but these are very deficient with regard to usability.

The question then becomes, "Should these codes be law?

Food for thought...

Doug

-- 

Douglas E Powell

[email protected]
http://www.linkedin.com/in/dougp01

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