§21-3-2. Guarding machinery and dangerous places; standards for
construction of scaffolding, hoists and temporary
floors; first aid equipment.
All power-driven machinery, including all saws, planers,
wood shapers, jointers, sandpaper machines, iron mangles, emery
wheels, ovens, furnaces, forges and rollers of metal; all
projecting set screws or moving parts; all drums, cogs, gearing,
belting, shafting, flywheels and flying shuttles; all laundry
machinery, mill gearing and machinery of every description; all
vats or pans and all receptacles containing molten metal or hot
or corrosive fluids in any factory, mercantile establishment,
mill or workshop, shall be so located, whenever possible, as not
to be dangerous to employees, or, where possible shall be
properly inclosed, fenced or otherwise protected. All dangerous
places, in or about mercantile establishments, factories, mills
or workshops, near to which any employee is obliged to pass or to
be employed, shall, where practicable, be properly inclosed,
fenced or otherwise guarded. No machine in any factory,
mercantile establishment, mill or workshop, shall be used when
the same is known to be dangerously defective, and no repairs
shall be made to the active mechanism or operative part of any
machine, when the machine is in motion. The state commissioner
of labor is authorized to adopt the codes promulgated by the
American standards association and approved by the United States
department of labor, relating to the construction of scaffolding,
hoists and temporary flooring of buildings two or more stories in
height, in the course of erection. All factories, mills or workshops employing five or more people in the mechanical
department shall keep on hand, easily accessible, necessary first
aid equipment recommended by the bureau of labor and approved by
the state health department.