Government Decree 162. List of heavy work and work with harmful or dangerous working conditions, in the performance of which the use of women's labor is prohibited. Extraction and production of table salt

GOVERNMENT OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

ON APPROVAL OF THE LIST


USE OF WOMEN'S LABOR

Article 10 federal law"On the basics of labor protection in Russian Federation"(Sobraniye Zakonodatelstva Rossiyskoy Federatsii, 1999, N 29, Art. 3702) The Government of the Russian Federation decides:
Approve the attached list of heavy work and work with harmful or dangerous working conditions, in the performance of which the use of women's labor is prohibited.

Prime Minister
Russian Federation
V. PUTIN

Approved
Government Decree
Russian Federation
dated February 25, 2000 N 162

SCROLL
HARD WORK AND WORK WITH HARMFUL OR DANGEROUS
WORKING CONDITIONS WHICH ARE PROHIBITED
USE OF WOMEN'S LABOR

I. Work related to lifting and moving
weights by hand

1. Work related to lifting and moving weights manually, in case of exceeding the established norms of maximum permissible loads for women when lifting and moving weights manually

II. Underground works

2. Underground work in mining industry and in the construction of underground structures, with the exception of work performed by women in leadership positions and not performing physical work; women engaged in sanitary and domestic services; women undergoing training and admitted to internships in the underground parts of the organization; women who must go down from time to time to the underground parts of the organization to perform work of a non-physical nature (list of positions of managers, specialists and other workers associated with underground work, where, as an exception, the use of female labor, is given in paragraph 2 of the notes to this list)

III. metalworking

Foundry works

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:
3. Cupola worker
4. Casting beater engaged in manual knockout
5. Charge loader in cupolas and furnaces, busy loading the charge manually
6. Casting welder
7. Metal pourer
8. Cutter engaged in work with pneumatic tools
9. Melter of metal and alloys
10. Workers involved in the suspension of hot casting on the conveyor and maintenance and repair of equipment in the tunnels of foundries

Welding


11. Gas welder and electric welder manual welding working in closed containers (tanks, boilers, etc.), as well as on high-rise communication structures (towers, masts) over 10 meters and steeplejack work

Boiler rooms, cold forging, drawing
and pressing works

Work performed by profession:
12. Boilermaker
13. Turner on turning - spinning machines, engaged in manual work
14. Chaser employed at work with a hand pneumatic tool

Forging and pressing and thermal works

Work performed by profession:
15. Bandezhnik engaged in hot work
16. Springer engaged in hot work when winding springs from wire with a diameter of more than 10 mm
17. Roller, busy rolling rings in a hot state
18. Hot metal springer

Metal plating and painting

Pages: 1 ...

Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation of February 25, 2000 N 162 "On approval of the list of heavy work and work with harmful or dangerous working conditions, in the performance of which the use of women's labor is prohibited"

II. Underground works

III. metalworking

Foundry works

Welding

Metal plating and painting

Works with lead

V. Mining

Ore mining

Extraction and processing of peat

VII. Drilling of the wells

VIII. Oil and gas

IX. Ferrous metallurgy

Domain production

Steelmaking

rolling production

Pipe production

Ferroalloy production

Coke production

x. Non-ferrous metallurgy

Alumina production

XII. Production of abrasives

Electric coal production

cable production

XVII. Chemical production

Paint and varnish production

logging work

Timber rafting

XXII. Cement production

XXIII. Stone processing and production of stone products

XXIV. Manufacture of reinforced concrete and concrete products and structures

XXV. Production of thermal insulation materials

XXVI. Production of soft roofing and waterproofing materials

XXVII. Manufacture of glass and glass products

XXVIII. Textile and light industry

Primary processing cotton

Hemp-jute production

wool production

Felting and felt production

Leather and leather production

Manufacture of leather shoes

XXIX. food industry

Production of meat products

Extraction and processing of fish

Bakery production

XXXI. Automobile transport

XXXII. Sea transport

XXXIII. River transport

XXXIV. civil Aviation

XXXV. Connection

XXXVI. Printing production

Works related to the use of lead alloys

Gravure printing workshops

XXXVII. Production of musical instruments

XXXVIII. Agriculture

XXXIX. Work performed in various industries economy

In accordance with the Federal Law "On the Fundamentals of Labor Protection in the Russian Federation" (Sobraniye Zakonodatelstva Rossiyskoy Federatsii, 1999, N 29, Art. 3702), the Government of the Russian Federation decides:

Approve the attached heavy work and work with harmful or dangerous working conditions, in the performance of which the use of women's labor is prohibited.

Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation

Moscow

List of heavy work and work with harmful or dangerous working conditions, in the performance of which the use of women's labor is prohibited

I. Works related to lifting and moving weights manually

1. Work related to lifting and moving weights manually, in case of exceeding the established maximum permissible loads for women when lifting and moving weights manually

II. Underground works

2. Underground work in the mining industry and in the construction of underground structures, with the exception of work performed by women in leadership positions and not performing physical work; women engaged in sanitary and domestic services; women undergoing training and admitted to internships in the underground parts of the organization; women who must go down from time to time to the underground parts of the organization to perform work of a non-physical nature (the list of positions of managers, specialists and other workers associated with underground work, where, as an exception, the use of female labor is allowed, is given in the notes to this list )

III. metalworking

Foundry works

3. Cupola worker

4. Casting beater engaged in manual knockout

5. Charge loader in cupolas and furnaces, busy loading the charge manually

6. Casting welder

7. Metal pourer

8. Cutter engaged in work with pneumatic tools

9. Melter of metal and alloys

10. Workers involved in the suspension of hot casting on the conveyor and maintenance and repair of equipment in the tunnels of foundries

Welding

11. Gas welder and electric welder of manual welding, working in closed containers (tanks, boilers, etc.), as well as on high-rise communication structures (towers, masts) over 10 meters and climbing works

Boiler, cold forging, drawing and spinning works

Work performed by profession:

12. Boilermaker

13. Turner on turning and spinning machines, engaged in manual work

14. Chaser employed at work with a hand pneumatic tool

Forging and pressing and thermal works

Work performed by profession:

15. Bandezhnik engaged in hot work

16. Springer engaged in hot work when winding springs from wire with a diameter of more than 10 mm

17. Roller, busy rolling rings in a hot state

18. Hot metal springer

Metal plating and painting

19. Sealing inside the caisson tanks

20. Permanent job hot lead plating (not galvanized)

Locksmith and locksmith and assembly work

Work performed by profession:

21. A pneumatic driller who performs work with a pneumatic tool that transmits vibration to the hands of the worker

22. A repairman engaged in: setting up equipment in workshops and departments: hot-rolling, pickling, enamelling, insulating with the use of organosilicon varnishes, lead coating in cable production; on hot repair of selenium and shoping devices (equipment);

adjustment of equipment in workshops and departments for the preparation and use of organosilicon varnishes and varnishes containing 40 percent or more of toluene, xylene;

repair of equipment in closed fuel depots and oil facilities at thermal power plants, as well as repair of equipment in tunnels and heating chambers in heating networks;

maintenance of water jacket furnaces in the production of non-ferrous metals and alloys;

adjustment and repair of hot molds;

directly in the workshops: milling, spreading, forming, foundry, pipe-filling, litho-mixing and assembly in the production of lead batteries;

repair of technological equipment at motor test stations, running on leaded gasoline and located in boxes

Works with lead

23. Smelting, casting, rolling, broaching and stamping of lead products, as well as lead-plating of cables and soldering of lead batteries

IV. Construction, installation and repair and construction works

24. Hot repair of furnaces and boiler furnaces

25. Uprooting stumps

26. Fastening structures and parts using a construction and assembly gun

27. Paving, demolition of buildings and structures

28. Punching holes (furrows, niches, etc.) in concrete, reinforced concrete and stone (brick) structures manually and using pneumatic tools

Work performed by profession:

29. Reinforcement worker engaged in manual installation of frames, manual, bending machines and scissors

30. Asphalt concrete worker, asphalt concrete worker-welder, engaged in manual work

31. Hydromonitor

32. A digger engaged in sinking wells

33. Bricklayer employed in the laying of modular solid silicate bricks

34. Roofer on steel roofs

35. Caisson operator, caisson miner, caisson fitter, caisson electrician

36. Motor grader driver

37. Asphalt distributor driver, truck driver

38. Concrete pumping plant operator, mobile bitumen melting plant operator

39. Bulldozer driver

40. Grader elevator operator

41. Mobile asphalt mixer driver

42. Asphalt paver driver

43. Single-bucket excavator driver, rotary excavator driver (ditcher and trencher)

44. The driver of an electric welding mobile unit with an internal combustion engine

45. Mobile power station driver working at a power station with an internal combustion engine with a capacity of 150 hp. and more

46. ​​Communications installer-antenna operator, busy working at height

47. Fitter for the installation of steel and reinforced concrete structures when working at height and steeplejack work

48. Solderer for lead (lead solderer)

49. Carpenter

50. Plumber, employed in the repair of the sewer network

51. Pipe laying of industrial reinforced concrete pipes

52. Piping of industrial brick pipes

V. Mining

Open pit mining and the surface of existing and under construction mines and mines, enrichment, agglomeration, briquetting

Works performed by general professions of mining and mining capital works:

53. Hole driller

54. Exploder, master explosives

55. Miner for the prevention and extinguishing of fires

56. Delivery of fixing materials to the mine

57. Fastener

58. Blacksmith Driller

59. Drilling rig operator

60. Loader driver

61. Machine operator for drilling mine shafts with a full section

62. Excavator driver

63. Tipper engaged in manual rolling and rolling of trolleys

64. Drifter

65. Stem, busy feeding the trolleys into the stands manually

66. Cleaner busy cleaning bunkers

67. An electrician (mechanic) on duty and for equipment repair, engaged in the maintenance and repair of equipment, mechanisms, water and air lines on mining

Works performed by the general professions of enrichment, agglomeration, briquetting and certain categories of workers:

68. Crusher employed in the crushing of hot pitch in the production of alumina

69. Calciner engaged in the process of burning raw materials and materials in the production of mercury

70. Workers and foremen of concentrating and crushing and screening factories, mines, mines and metallurgical enterprises engaged in crushing, grinding, grinding and blending ores of ferrous, non-ferrous and rare metals, fluorspar and coal, which produce dust containing 10 percent and more free silicon dioxide, when performing work manually

71. Workers employed in lead enrichment shops

72. Workers and craftsmen engaged in the enrichment of niobium (loparite) ores

Construction of subways, tunnels and underground structures for special purposes

Work performed by profession:

73. Mining Equipment Installer

74. Drifter on surface work

Ore mining

Work performed by profession:

75. Placer Miner

76. Chisel Loader

77. Drager

78. Dredge sailor

79. Dredge driver

80. Rocket driver

Extraction and processing of peat

Work performed by profession:

81. Ditcher

82. Grubber

83. Machine operator for the extraction and processing of sod peat

84. Driver of machines for the preparation of peat deposits for operation

85. Peat excavator driver

86. Peat worker, engaged in felling trees, on the lining of peat bricks

Processing of brown coal and ozocerite ores

Work performed by profession:

87. Mountain wax production operator

88. Operator for the production of ozokerite and ozokerite products

89. Crusher

90. Briquette press operator

91. Filling machine operator

VI. Exploration and topographic and geodetic works

Work performed by profession:

92. Explosive, master explosives

93. Installer of geodetic signs

94. Electrician (mechanic) on duty and equipment repair, employed in the field

VII. Drilling of the wells

Work performed by profession:

95. Driller of operational and exploratory drilling of wells for oil and gas

96. Tower assembler, rig welder, rig electrician

97. Drilling rig operator

98. Well Cementing Engineer

99. Cementing unit motorist, cement-sand mixing unit motorist

100. Pipe presser

101. Assistant driller for operational and exploratory drilling of oil and gas wells (first)

102. Assistant driller of operational and exploratory drilling of wells for oil and gas (second)

103. Drilling mud preparer busy preparing mud manually

104. Drilling rig maintenance fitter directly employed on drilling rigs

105. Repairman engaged in the repair of drilling equipment

106. Toollock installer

107. Electrician for maintenance of drilling rigs

VIII. Oil and gas

108. Workover driller

109. Driller of a floating drilling unit at sea

110. Steam mobile dewaxing machine operator

111. Mobile compressor driver

112. Lift driver

113. Flushing machine driver

114. Operator for hydraulic fracturing layers

115. Well preparation operator for workover and underground workover

116. Underground well workover operator

117. Operator for chemical treatment of wells

118. Well Workover Driller Assistant

119. Assistant driller of a floating drilling unit at sea

120. Workers, managers and specialists permanently employed in underground oil production

121. Locksmith for the installation and repair of offshore drilling bases and racks

122. A mechanic-repairer engaged in the installation and maintenance of process equipment and the repair of oilfield equipment

123. Electrician for the repair and maintenance of electrical equipment, engaged in the maintenance and repair of technological equipment

IX. Ferrous metallurgy

124. Ladle, employed in work with molten metal

125. Metal heater employed at work in methodical, chamber furnaces and wells of rolling and pipe industries

126. Processor of surface defects of metal, employed at work with a pneumatic tool

Domain production

Work performed by profession:

127. Horse blast furnace

128. Blast furnace plumber

129. Hearth blast furnace

130. Scale wagon driver

131. Skipova

Steelmaking

Work performed by profession:

132. Filling machine operator

133. Mixer

134. Blocker

135. Furnace reduction of iron and annealing of iron powders

136. Melter of deoxidizers

137. Converter's assistant steelworker

138. Handy steelworker open-hearth furnace

139. Assistant steelmaker of the electroslag remelting plant

140. Electric furnace steelworker's assistant

141. Caster of steel

142. Converter steelmaker

143. Open-hearth furnace steelmaker

144. Steelmaker of electroslag remelting plant

145. Electric furnace steelmaker

rolling production

Work performed by profession:

146. Roller of hot rolling mill

147. Pitch cooker

148. Hot rolling mill assistant

149. Rail fastener presser

150. Fitter-conductor employed in section rolling production

Pipe production

Work performed by profession:

151. Sizing mill roller

152. Roller of hot-rolled pipe mill

153. Roller of furnace pipe welding mill

154. Roller of cold-rolled pipe mill

155. Pipe mill roller

156. Pipe drawer employed on non-mechanized mills

157. Pipe calibrator on the press

158. Blacksmith on hammers and presses

159. Handy roller mill of hot-rolled pipes

160. Handy rolling mill for cold-rolled pipes

Ferroalloy production

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

161. Hearth ferroalloy furnaces

162. Smelter engaged in melting and granulating molten vanadium pentoxide

163. Ferroalloy smelter

164. Workers involved in the smelting of silicon alloys in open arc furnaces

165. Workers engaged in obtaining metallic chromium and chromium-containing alloys by aluminothermic method

Coke production

166. Work associated with direct employment in the production of benzene, its hydrotreatment and rectification

Work performed by profession:

167. Barillet

168. Door

169. Crusher

170. Lukovoi

171. Scrubber-pump, engaged in the maintenance of the phenol plant in the workshop for capturing coking products

172. Repairman engaged in the maintenance of coke oven batteries

X. Non-ferrous metallurgy

Works performed by general professions:

173. Anode pourer engaged in pouring bottom sections of anodes in the production of aluminum, silumin and silicon

174. Fitter at the repair of bathtubs, engaged in drilling a recess for the cathode rod in the production of aluminum, silumin and silicon

175. Melter

176. Calciner

177. Repairman, electrician for the repair and maintenance of electrical equipment, employed in the main metallurgical shops

178. Sinterer

179. A shifter working at furnaces in the production of tin

Production of non-ferrous and rare metals, production of powders from non-ferrous metals

180. Works performed by workers and foremen employed in workshops (departments and sections) for the production of titanium tetrachloride (tetrachloride)

181. Works performed by workers and craftsmen employed in the shops for chlorination of loparite concentrate

182. Works performed by workers and foremen employed in workshops (departments and sections) for the reduction of tetrachloride and metal separation in the production of metallic titanium

183. Works performed by workers and foremen employed in departments (at sites) of chlorination and rectification of titanium raw materials (slags)

184. Works performed by workers employed in the department for processing slags by the sublimation method at a fuming plant in the production of tin

185. Work performed by workers employed in smelting shops, as well as processing cinders in the production of mercury

Work performed by profession:

186. Anode in aluminum production

187. Titanium sponge beater

188. Metal pourer

189. Cathodic

190. Converter

191. Capacitor

192. Installer of reaction apparatus, engaged in the installation and dismantling of baths and furnaces, in the repair and restoration of reaction apparatus

193. Mercury Beater

194. Furnace in the production of zinc dust

195. Furnace on Waelz furnaces

196. Furnace on reduction and distillation of titanium and rare metals

197. Furnace for recovery of nickel powder

198. Furnace for processing titanium-containing and rare-earth materials

199. Sludger of electrolyte baths, busy cleaning baths by hand

200. Molten salt cell

Forming non-ferrous metals

201. Work performed by a hot metal roller engaged in the rolling of non-ferrous metals and their alloys

Production of aluminum by electrolytic method

202. Work performed by workers and foremen

Alumina production

203. The work performed by the operator of material handling equipment employed on repair work in hard-to-reach places of pneumatic and hydraulic loaders

XI. Repair of equipment of power plants and networks

Work performed by profession:

204. Repair electrician overhead lines engaged in climbing work repairing high-voltage power lines

205. An electrician for the repair and installation of cable lines, engaged in the repair of cable glands with lead litharge and in the soldering of lead cable sleeves and sheaths

XII. Production of abrasives

Work performed by profession:

206. Balancer-filler of abrasive wheels, busy pouring lead into abrasive products

207. Bulldozer driver employed in the hot dismantling of resistance furnaces in the production of abrasives

208. Melter of abrasive materials

209. A miner employed in a corundum shop

210. Disassembler of resistance furnaces, employed in the shop for the production of silicon carbide

XIII. Electrical production

Works performed by general professions:

211. Mercury Distiller

212. Mercury rectifier molder working with open mercury

Electric coal production

213. Work performed by workers in the smelting of pitch

cable production

Work performed by profession:

214. Presser of cables with lead or aluminum, engaged in hot pressing with lead

215. Stripper of sheaths from cable products, engaged in stripping only lead sheaths

Production of chemical current sources

Work performed by profession:

216. Caster of products from lead alloys

217. Dry mass mixer (for lead batteries)

218. Smelter of lead alloys

219. The cutter of battery plates, engaged in the stamping-separation of molded lead plates

XIV. Radio engineering and electronic production

Work performed by profession:

220. Tester of parts and devices, employed in testing devices in thermal vacuum chambers at a temperature of + 28 ° C and above and -60 ° C and below, subject to direct presence in them

221. Caster of magnets on furnaces-crystallizers

222. Smelter of shoopsalloy and bismuth

XV. Production and repair of aircraft

Work performed by profession:

223. Aircraft engine repairman and aggregate repairman engaged in the repair of engines and aggregates running on leaded gasoline

XVI. Shipbuilding and ship repair

Work performed by profession:

224. Armor of reinforced concrete ships, busy working on vibrating tables, vibrating platforms, cassette installations and with manual vibrators

225. Ship bender employed in hot bending

226. Ship's boilermaker

227. Painter, ship insulator engaged in painting work in tanks, the second bottom area, warm boxes and other hard-to-reach areas of ships, as well as in cleaning old paint in these areas of ships

228. Coppersmith for the manufacture of ship products, engaged in hot work

229. Ship carpenter working in closed compartments of ships

230. Employees of the commissioning team at mooring, factory and state tests

231. Ship's chopper, employed at work with a hand pneumatic tool

232. Assembler of hulls of metal ships, engaged in sectional, block and slipway assembly of surface ships with a constant combination of his work with electric tack, gas cutting and metal processing with hand pneumatic tools, as well as in the repair of ships

233. Mechanic for testing installations and equipment, engaged in the adjustment and testing of marine diesel engines in enclosed spaces and inside ships

234. Ship fitter, engaged in installation inside ships during repairs

235. Ship-repairer engaged in work inside ships

236. Ship hull repairman

237. Ship rigger

238. Pipeline ship

XVII. Chemical production

Work performed in chemical industries by profession and certain categories of workers:

239. Melting operator engaged in melting and refining pitch

240. A steamer employed in the tearing-stripping of rubber

Production of non-organic products

Calcium carbide production

241. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in furnaces and manual crushing of carbide

Phosgene production

242. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of mercury and its compounds

243. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages, except for production with remote control

Production of yellow phosphorus

244. Workers, shift managers and specialists directly involved in maintenance of shaft slotted furnaces, roasting and sintering furnaces, fine granulation plants, in phosphorus electric sublimation departments, in filling phosphorus tanks, in maintenance of storage tanks for phosphorus, phosphorus sludge, sludge distillation and in the processing of fire-liquid slag

Production of phosphorus trichloride and phosphorus pentasulphide

245. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of chlorine by the mercury method

246. Workers employed at technological stages

Production of liquid chlorine and chlorine dioxide

247. Workers employed at technological stages

Carbon disulfide production

248. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in the departments: retort and condensation

Works with fluorine, hydrogen fluoride and fluorides

249. Workers, managers and specialists (except for work performed in laboratories using hydrofluoric acid and fluorides)

Production of arsenic and arsenic compounds

250. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Silicon tetrachloride production

251. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Industrial iodine production

252. Workers engaged in the extraction of iodine

Production of organic products

Production of benzatron and its chlorine and bromo derivatives, vilontron

253. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of aniline, paranitroaniline, aniline salts and fluxes

254. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of benzidine and its analogues

255. Workers, managers, specialists and other employees directly involved in the production and at the dissolution station of these products

Production of carbon tetrachloride, golovaks, rematol, sovol

256. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Chloropicrin production

257. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of catalysts containing arsenic

258. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of cyram, mercury- and arsenic-containing pesticides

259. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Chloroprene production

260. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of chloroprene rubber and latex

261. Workers involved in the technological stages of polymerization and product isolation

Production of ethyl liquid

262. Workers, managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of benzene, toluene, xylene

263. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Paint and varnish production

Production of lead litharge and minium, lead crowns, whitewash, lead greenery and yarmedyanka

264. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Manufacture of chemical fibers and threads

265. Regeneration operator engaged in the regeneration of carbon disulfide

Manufacture of fiberglass products based on synthetic resins (phenol-formaldehyde, epoxy, unsaturated polyester resins)

266. Operators employed in the contact molding of large-sized products with an area of ​​1.5 sq.m or more

Production of medicines, medical, biological preparations and materials

Production of antibiotics

267. Filtration operator engaged in manual disassembly and assembly of filter presses with a frame size of more than 500 mm

Obtaining morphine from raw opium

268. Filtration operator engaged in manual disassembly and assembly of filter presses with a frame size of more than 500 mm

Androgen production

269. Operator for the production of synthetic hormones, engaged in the production of testosterone preparations and its derivatives

XVIII. Production and processing of rubber compounds

Work performed by profession:

270. Vulcanizer engaged in loading, unloading products in boilers over 6 meters long, vulcanizing propeller shafts

271. Rubber mixer driver

272. Workers employed in the departments: cold vulcanization, production of radol and factis

273. Repairman rubber products occupied in the manufacture and repair of large-sized rubber parts and products, in the vulcanization of reinforced parts (large tires, rubber fuel tanks, tanks, conveyor belts, etc.)

Production, retreading and repair of tires

274. Works performed by a vulcanizer, tire assembler (heavy duty)

XIX. Processing of oil, gas, shale and coal, production of synthetic petroleum products, petroleum oils and lubricants

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

275. Coke cleaner

276. Coke unloader

277. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological units for leaded gasoline

278. Workers employed in extraction shops and departments of production of aromatic hydrocarbons

279. Workers involved in the preparation of arsenic solutions in the purification of sulfur-containing petroleum gas

XX. Logging and timber rafting

logging work

280. Loading and unloading of round timber (except for balance sheets, mine stand and firewood up to 2 meters long)

281. Stacking of round timber (except for balance sheets, pit stand and firewood up to 2 meters long)

Work performed by profession:

282. Logger

283. Lumberjack engaged in felling, cross-cutting and hilling up longitude, chopping firewood, harvesting and cutting stump resin, as well as harvesting wood using hand tools

284. Loader-dumper of timber, engaged in the creation of inter-operational and seasonal stocks of tree trunks and trees, loading trees, tree trunks and round timber (with the exception of balance sheets, a mine rack and firewood up to 2 meters long) onto a timber rolling stock and unloading them, performing work manually

285. Choker

Timber rafting

Work performed by profession:

286. Alloyer

287. Rigger engaged in loading and unloading rigging

288. Raft shaper

XXI. Manufacture of pulp, paper, cardboard and products from them

Work performed by profession:

289. Operator for the preparation of chemical solutions, engaged in the dissolution of chlorine

290. Impregnation operator engaged in the production of anti-corrosion and inhibition paper

291. Fibrous cooker

292. Pulp cook

293. Treesteam

294. Crusher in sections XXXII "Sea transport" and XXXIII "River transport" of this list

351. Turning fish barrels by hand

Work performed by profession:

352. Loader-unloader food products busy loading grates with canned food into autoclaves by hand

353. Processor of a sea animal engaged in the skinning of skins of a sea animal

354. A fish processor engaged in manual pouring and unloading of fish from vats, chests, ships, slots and other waterways; mixing fish in salted vats by hand

355. Presser-squeezer of food products, engaged in the pressing (squeezing) of fish in barrels by hand

356. Receiver of watercraft

357. Coastal fisherman engaged in manual hauling of cast nets, ice fishing with cast nets, fixed nets and venters

Bakery production

358. Work performed by a tester employed on dough mixers with rolling bowls with a capacity of more than 330 liters when moving them manually

Tobacco-makhorka and fermentation production

359. Work performed by an auxiliary worker engaged in transporting bales of tobacco

Perfumery and cosmetics production

360. Work performed by a worker engaged in the grinding of amidochloric mercury

Extraction and production of table salt

Work performed by profession:

361. Salt loader in pools

362. Pool preparer

363. Track worker on the lake

XXX. Rail transport and metro

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

364. Accumulator repairer of lead batteries

365. A trolley driver and his assistant working on broad gauge railway lines

366. Freight train conductor

367. Stoker locomotives in the depot

368. Diesel train driver and his assistant

369. The engine driver and his assistant, working on railway lines widely

"On approval of the list of heavy work and work with harmful or dangerous working conditions, in the performance of which the use of women's labor is prohibited"

Edition dated 02/25/2000 - Valid

GOVERNMENT OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

RESOLUTION
dated February 25, 2000 N 162

ON THE APPROVAL OF THE LIST OF HARD WORK AND WORKS WITH HARMFUL OR DANGEROUS LABOR CONDITIONS WHERE THE WORK OF WOMEN IS PROHIBITED

Prime Minister
Russian Federation
V. PUTIN

Approved
Government Decree
Russian Federation
dated February 25, 2000 N 162

SCROLL
HARD WORK AND WORKS WITH HARMFUL OR DANGEROUS WORK CONDITIONS WHERE THE WORK OF WOMEN IS PROHIBITED

I. WORK RELATED TO LIFTING AND MOVING LOADS MANUALLY

1. Work related to lifting and moving weights manually, in case of exceeding the established norms of maximum permissible loads for women when lifting and moving weights manually

II. UNDERGROUND WORKS

2. Underground work in the mining industry and in the construction of underground structures, with the exception of work performed by women in leadership positions and not performing physical work; women engaged in sanitary and domestic services; women undergoing training and admitted to internships in the underground parts of the organization; women who must go down from time to time to the underground parts of the organization to perform work of a non-physical nature (the list of positions of managers, specialists and other workers associated with underground work, where, as an exception, the use of female labor is allowed, is given in paragraph 2 of the notes to this list)

III. METALWORKING

3. Cupola worker

4. Casting beater engaged in manual knockout

5. Charge loader in cupolas and furnaces, busy loading the charge manually

6. Casting welder

7. Metal pourer

8. Cutter engaged in work with pneumatic tools

9. Melter of metal and alloys

10. Workers involved in the suspension of hot casting on the conveyor and maintenance and repair of equipment in the tunnels of foundries

Welding

11. Gas welder and electric welder of manual welding, working in closed containers (tanks, boilers, etc.), as well as on high-rise communication structures (towers, masts) over 10 meters and climbing works

Boiler rooms, cold forging, drawing
and pressing works

Work performed by profession:

12. Boilermaker

13. Turner on turning and spinning machines, engaged in manual work

14. Chaser employed at work with a hand pneumatic tool

Forging and pressing and thermal works

Work performed by profession:

15. Bandezhnik engaged in hot work

16. Springer engaged in hot work when winding springs from wire with a diameter of more than 10 mm

17. Roller, busy rolling rings in a hot state

18. Hot metal springer

Metal plating and painting

19. Sealing inside the caisson tanks

20. Permanent hot lead plating (not galvanized)

Locksmith and locksmith and assembly work

Work performed by profession:

21. A pneumatic driller who performs work with a pneumatic tool that transmits vibration to the hands of the worker

22. A mechanic-repairman, busy: setting up equipment in workshops and departments:

hot-rolled, pickling, enameling, insulation with the use of silicone varnishes, lead plating in cable production;

on hot repair of selenium and shoping devices (equipment);

adjustment of equipment in workshops and departments for the preparation and use of organosilicon varnishes and varnishes containing 40 percent or more of toluene, xylene;

repair of equipment in closed fuel depots and oil facilities at thermal power plants, as well as repair of equipment in tunnels and heating chambers in heating networks; maintenance of water jacket furnaces in the production of non-ferrous metals and alloys; adjustment and repair of hot molds; directly in the workshops: milling, spreading, forming, foundry, pipe-filling, litho-mixing and assembly in the production of lead batteries; repair of technological equipment at motor test stations, running on leaded gasoline and located in boxes

23. Smelting, casting, rolling, broaching and stamping of lead products, as well as lead-plating of cables and soldering of lead batteries

IV. CONSTRUCTION, INSTALLATION AND REPAIR AND CONSTRUCTION WORKS

24. Hot repair of furnaces and boiler furnaces

25. Uprooting stumps

26. Fastening structures and parts using a construction and assembly gun

27. Paving, demolition of buildings and structures

28. Punching of holes (furrows, niches, etc.) in concrete, reinforced concrete and stone (brick) structures manually and with the use of pneumatic tools Works performed by professions:

29. Reinforcement worker engaged in manual installation of frames, manual, bending machines and scissors

30. Asphalt concrete worker, asphalt concrete worker-welder, engaged in manual work

31. Hydromonitor

32. A digger engaged in sinking wells

33. Bricklayer employed in the laying of modular solid silicate bricks

34. Roofer on steel roofs

35. Caisson operator, caisson miner, caisson fitter, caisson electrician

36. Motor grader driver

37. Asphalt distributor driver, truck driver

38. Concrete pumping plant operator, mobile bitumen melting plant operator

39. Bulldozer driver

40. Grader elevator operator

41. Mobile asphalt mixer driver

42. Asphalt paver driver

43. Single-bucket excavator driver, rotary excavator driver (ditcher and trencher)

44. The driver of an electric welding mobile unit with an internal combustion engine

45. Mobile power station driver working at a power station with an internal combustion engine with a capacity of 150 liters. With. and more

46. ​​Communications installer-antenna operator, busy working at height

47. Fitter for the installation of steel and reinforced concrete structures when working at height and steeplejack work

48. Solderer for lead (lead solderer)

49. Carpenter

50. Plumber, employed in the repair of the sewer network

51. Pipe laying of industrial reinforced concrete pipes

52. Piping of industrial brick pipes

V. MINING

Open pit mining and surface operating
and mines under construction, enrichment, agglomeration,
briquetting

Works performed by general professions of mining and mining capital works:

53. Hole driller

54. Exploder, master explosives

55. Miner for the prevention and extinguishing of fires

56. Delivery of fixing materials to the mine

57. Fastener

58. Blacksmith Driller

59. Drilling rig operator

60. Loader driver

61. Machine operator for drilling mine shafts with a full section

62. Excavator driver

63. Tipper engaged in manual rolling and rolling of trolleys

64. Drifter

65. Stem, busy feeding the trolleys into the stands manually

66. Cleaner busy cleaning bunkers

67. Electrical fitter (fitter) on duty and equipment repair, engaged in maintenance and repair of equipment, mechanisms, water and air lines at mining operations Works performed in general professions of enrichment, agglomeration, briquetting and certain categories of workers:

68. Crusher employed in the crushing of hot pitch in the production of alumina

69. Calciner engaged in the process of burning raw materials and materials in the production of mercury

70. Workers and foremen of concentrating and crushing and screening factories, mines, mines and metallurgical enterprises engaged in crushing, grinding, grinding and blending ores of ferrous, non-ferrous and rare metals, fluorspar and coal, which produce dust containing 10 percent and more free silicon dioxide, when performing work manually

71. Workers employed in lead enrichment shops

72. Workers and craftsmen engaged in the enrichment of niobium (loparite) ores

Construction of subways, tunnels and underground
special purpose facilities

Work performed by profession:

73. Mining Equipment Installer

74. Drifter on surface work

Ore mining

Work performed by profession:

75. Placer Miner

76. Chisel Loader

78. Dredge sailor

79. Dredge driver

80. Rocket driver

Extraction and processing of peat

Work performed by profession:

81. Ditcher

82. Grubber

83. Machine operator for the extraction and processing of sod peat

84. Driver of machines for the preparation of peat deposits for operation

85. Peat excavator driver

86. Peat worker, engaged in felling trees, on the lining of peat bricks

Processing of brown coal and ozocerite ores

Work performed by profession:

87. Mountain wax production operator

88. Operator for the production of ozokerite and ozokerite products

89. Crusher

90. Briquette press operator

91. Filling machine operator

VI. GEOLOGICAL EXPLORATION AND TOPOGRAPHIC-GEODETIC WORKS

Work performed by profession:

92. Explosive, master explosives

93. Installer of geodetic signs

94. Electrician (mechanic) on duty and equipment repair, employed in the field

VII. DRILLING OF THE WELLS

Work performed by profession:

95. Driller of operational and exploratory drilling of wells for oil and gas

96. Tower assembler, rig welder, rig electrician

97. Drilling rig operator

98. Well Cementing Engineer

99. Cementing unit motorist, cement-sand mixing unit motorist

100. Pipe presser

101. Assistant driller for operational and exploratory drilling of oil and gas wells (first)

102. Assistant driller of operational and exploratory drilling of wells for oil and gas (second)

103. Drilling mud preparer busy preparing mud manually

104. Drilling rig maintenance fitter directly employed on drilling rigs

105. Repairman engaged in the repair of drilling equipment

106. Toollock installer

107. Electrician for maintenance of drilling rigs

VIII. OIL AND GAS

108. Workover driller

109. Driller of a floating drilling unit at sea

110. Steam mobile dewaxing machine operator

111. Mobile compressor driver

112. Lift driver

113. Flushing machine driver

114. Hydraulic fracturing operator

115. Well preparation operator for workover and underground workover

116. Underground well workover operator

117. Operator for chemical treatment of wells

118. Well Workover Driller Assistant

119. Assistant driller of a floating drilling unit at sea

120. Workers, managers and specialists permanently employed in underground oil production

121. Locksmith for the installation and repair of offshore drilling bases and racks

122. A mechanic-repairer engaged in the installation and maintenance of process equipment and the repair of oilfield equipment

123. Electrician for the repair and maintenance of electrical equipment, engaged in the maintenance and repair of technological equipment

IX. FERROUS METALLURGY

124. Ladle, employed in work with molten metal

125. Metal heater employed at work in methodical, chamber furnaces and wells of rolling and pipe industries

126. Processor of surface defects of metal, employed at work with a pneumatic tool

Domain production

Work performed by profession:

127. Horse blast furnace

128. Blast furnace plumber

129. Hearth blast furnace

130. Scale wagon driver

131. Skipova

Steelmaking

Work performed by profession:

132. Filling machine operator

133. Mixer

134. Blocker

135. Furnace reduction of iron and annealing of iron powders

136. Melter of deoxidizers

137. Converter's assistant steelworker

138. Handy steelworker open-hearth furnace

139. Assistant steelmaker of the electroslag remelting unit

140. Electric furnace steelworker's assistant

141. Caster of steel

142. Converter steelmaker

143. Open-hearth furnace steelmaker

144. Steelmaker of electroslag remelting plant

145. Electric furnace steelmaker

rolling production

Work performed by profession:

146. Roller of hot rolling mill

147. Pitch cooker

148. Hot rolling mill assistant

149. Rail fastener presser

150. Fitter-conductor employed in section rolling production

Pipe production

Work performed by profession:

151. Sizing mill roller

152. Roller of hot-rolled pipe mill

153. Roller of furnace pipe welding mill

154. Roller of cold-rolled pipe mill

155. Pipe mill roller

156. Pipe drawer employed on non-mechanized mills

157. Pipe calibrator on the press

158. Blacksmith on hammers and presses

159. Handy roller mill of hot-rolled pipes

160. Handy rolling mill for cold-rolled pipes

Ferroalloy production

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

161. Hearth ferroalloy furnaces

162. Smelter engaged in melting and granulating molten vanadium pentoxide

163. Ferroalloy smelter

164. Workers involved in the smelting of silicon alloys in open arc furnaces

165. Workers engaged in obtaining metallic chromium and chromium-containing alloys by aluminothermic method

Coke production

166. Work related to direct employment in the production of benzene, its hydrotreatment and rectification Work performed by profession:

167. Barillet

168. Door

169. Crusher

170. Lukovoi

171. Scrubber-pump, engaged in the maintenance of the phenol plant in the workshop for capturing coking products

172. Repairman engaged in the maintenance of coke oven batteries

X. NON-FERROUS METALLURGY

Works performed by general professions:

173. Anode pourer engaged in pouring bottom sections of anodes in the production of aluminum, silumin and silicon

174. Fitter at the repair of bathtubs, engaged in drilling a recess for the cathode rod in the production of aluminum, silumin and silicon

175. Melter

176. Calciner

177. Repairman, electrician for the repair and maintenance of electrical equipment, employed in the main metallurgical shops

178. Sinterer

179. A shifter working at furnaces in the production of tin

Production of non-ferrous and rare metals, production of powders from non-ferrous metals

180. Works performed by workers and foremen employed in workshops (departments and sections) for the production of titanium tetrachloride (tetrachloride)

181. Works performed by workers and craftsmen employed in the shops for chlorination of loparite concentrate

182. Works performed by workers and foremen employed in workshops (departments and sections) for the reduction of tetrachloride and metal separation in the production of metallic titanium

183. Works performed by workers and foremen employed in departments (at sites) of chlorination and rectification of titanium raw materials (slags)

184. Works performed by workers employed in the department for processing slags by the sublimation method at a fuming plant in the production of tin

185. Work performed by workers employed in smelting shops, as well as processing cinders in the production of mercury Work performed by profession:

186. Anode in aluminum production

187. Titanium sponge beater

188. Metal pourer

189. Cathodic

190. Converter

191. Capacitor

192. Installer of reaction apparatus, engaged in the installation and dismantling of baths and furnaces, in the repair and restoration of reaction apparatus

193. Mercury beater

194. Furnace in the production of zinc dust

195. Furnace on Welz stoves

196. Furnace on reduction and distillation of titanium and rare metals

197. Furnace for recovery of nickel powder

198. Furnace for processing titanium-containing and rare-earth materials

199. Sludger of electrolyte baths, busy cleaning baths by hand

200. Molten salt cell

Forming non-ferrous metals

201. Work performed by a hot metal roller engaged in the rolling of non-ferrous metals and their alloys

Production of aluminum by electrolytic method

202. Work performed by workers and foremen

Alumina production

203. The work performed by the operator of the loaders engaged in repair work in hard-to-reach places of pneumatic and hydraulic loaders

XI. REPAIR OF EQUIPMENT OF POWER PLANTS AND NETWORKS

Work performed by profession:

204. An electrician for the repair of overhead power lines, engaged in climbing work repairing high-voltage power lines

205. An electrician for the repair and installation of cable lines, engaged in the repair of cable glands with lead litharge and in the soldering of lead cable sleeves and sheaths

XII. ABRASIVE PRODUCTION

Work performed by profession:

206. Balancer-filler of abrasive wheels, busy pouring lead into abrasive products

207. Bulldozer driver employed in the hot dismantling of resistance furnaces in the production of abrasives

208. Melter of abrasive materials

209. A miner employed in a corundum shop

210. Disassembler of resistance furnaces, employed in the shop for the production of silicon carbide

XIII. ELECTRICAL PRODUCTION

Works performed by general professions:

211. Mercury Distiller

212. Mercury rectifier molder working with open mercury

Electric coal production

213. Work performed by workers in the smelting of pitch

cable production

Work performed by profession:

214. Presser of cables with lead or aluminum, engaged in hot pressing with lead

215. Stripper of sheaths from cable products, engaged in stripping only lead sheaths

Production of chemical current sources

Work performed by profession:

216. Caster of products from lead alloys

217. Dry mass mixer (for lead batteries)

218. Smelter of lead alloys

219. The cutter of battery plates, engaged in the stamping-separation of molded lead plates

XIV. RADIO ENGINEERING AND ELECTRONIC PRODUCTION

Work performed by profession:

220. Tester of parts and instruments, engaged in testing o o

devices in thermal vacuum chambers at a temperature of +28 C and above and -60 C and below, provided that they are directly located in them

221. Caster of magnets on furnaces-crystallizers

222. Smelter of shoopsalloy and bismuth

XV. PRODUCTION AND REPAIR OF AIRCRAFT

Work performed by profession:

223. Aircraft engine repairman and assembly fitter engaged in the repair of engines and units running on leaded gasoline

XVI. SHIPBUILDING AND SHIP REPAIR

Work performed by profession:

224. Armor of reinforced concrete ships, busy working on vibrating tables, vibrating platforms, cassette installations and with manual vibrators

225. Ship bender employed in hot bending

226. Ship's boilermaker

227. Painter, ship insulator engaged in painting work in tanks, the second bottom area, warm boxes and other hard-to-reach areas of ships, as well as in cleaning old paint in these areas of ships

228. Coppersmith for the manufacture of ship products, engaged in hot work

229. Ship carpenter working in closed compartments of ships

230. Employees of the commissioning team at mooring, factory and state tests

231. Ship's chopper, employed at work with a hand pneumatic tool

233. Mechanic for testing installations and equipment, engaged in the adjustment and testing of marine diesel engines in enclosed spaces and inside ships

234. Ship fitter, engaged in installation inside ships during repairs

235. Ship-repairer engaged in work inside ships

236. Shipbuilder-repairman

237. Ship rigger

238. Pipeline ship

XVII. CHEMICAL PRODUCTION

Works performed in chemical industries by professions and certain categories of workers:

239. Melting operator engaged in melting and refining pitch

240. A steamer employed in the tearing-stripping of rubber

Production of non-organic products

Calcium carbide production

241. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in furnaces and manual crushing of carbide

Phosgene production

242. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of mercury and its compounds

243. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages, except for remote-controlled production

Production of yellow phosphorus

244. Workers, shift managers and specialists directly involved in maintenance of shaft slotted furnaces, roasting and sintering furnaces, fine granulation plants, in phosphorus electric sublimation departments, in filling phosphorus tanks, in maintenance of storage tanks for phosphorus, phosphorus sludge, sludge distillation and in the processing of fire-liquid slag

Production of phosphorus trichloride and phosphorus pentasulphide

245. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of chlorine by the mercury method

246. Workers employed at technological stages

Production of liquid chlorine and chlorine dioxide

247. Workers employed at technological stages

Carbon disulfide production

248. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in the departments: retort and condensation

Works with fluorine, hydrogen fluoride and fluorides

249. Workers, managers and specialists (except for work performed in laboratories using hydrofluoric acid and fluorides)

Production of arsenic and arsenic compounds

250. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Silicon tetrachloride production

251. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Industrial iodine production

252. Workers engaged in the extraction of iodine

Production of organic products

Production of benzatron and its chlorine and bromo derivatives, vilontron

253. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of aniline, paranitroaniline, aniline salts and fluxes

254. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of benzidine and its analogues

255. Workers, managers, specialists and other employees directly involved in the production and at the dissolution station of these products

Production of carbon tetrachloride, golovaks, rematol,

256. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Chloropicrin production

257. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of catalysts containing arsenic

258. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of cyram, mercury- and arsenic-containing pesticides

259. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Chloroprene production

260. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of chloroprene rubber and latex

261. Workers involved in the technological stages of polymerization and product isolation

Production of ethyl liquid

262. Workers, managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Production of benzene, toluene, xylene

263. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Paint and varnish production

Production of lead litharge and red lead, lead crowns, whitewash,

lead greens and yarmedyanka

264. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological stages

Manufacture of chemical fibers and threads

265. Regeneration operator engaged in the regeneration of carbon disulfide

Manufacture of fiberglass products based on

synthetic resins (phenol-formaldehyde,

epoxy, unsaturated polyester resins)

266. Operators employed in the contact molding of large-sized products with an area of ​​​​1.5 square meters. m and more

Production of medicines, medical, biological
preparations and materials

Production of antibiotics

267. Filtration operator engaged in manual disassembly and assembly of filter presses with a frame size of more than 500 mm

Obtaining morphine from raw opium

268. Filtration operator engaged in manual disassembly and assembly of filter presses with a frame size of more than 500 mm

Androgen production

269. Operator for the production of synthetic hormones, engaged in the production of testosterone preparations and its derivatives

XVIII. PRODUCTION AND PROCESSING OF RUBBER COMPOUNDS

Work performed by profession:

270. A vulcanizer engaged in loading and unloading products in boilers over 6 meters long, vulcanizing propeller shafts

271. Rubber mixer driver

272. Workers employed in the departments: cold vulcanization, production of radol and factis

273. Repairer of rubber products, engaged in the manufacture and repair of large-sized rubber parts and products, in the vulcanization of reinforced parts (large tires, rubber fuel tanks, tanks, conveyor belts, etc.)

Production, retreading and repair of tires

274. Works performed by a vulcanizer, tire assembler (heavy duty)

XIX. REFINING OF OIL, GAS, SHALE AND COAL, PRODUCTION OF SYNTHETIC PETROLEUM PRODUCTS, PETROLEUM OILS AND LUBRICANTS

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

275. Coke cleaner

276. Coke unloader

277. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed at technological units for leaded gasoline

278. Workers employed in extraction shops and departments of production of aromatic hydrocarbons

279. Workers involved in the preparation of arsenic solutions in the purification of sulfur-containing petroleum gas

XX. FOREST HARVESTING AND ALLOY

logging work

280. Loading and unloading of round timber (except for balance sheets, mine stand and firewood up to 2 meters long)

281. Stacking of round timber (except for balance sheets, pit stand and firewood up to 2 meters long) Works performed by professions:

282. Logger

283. Lumberjack engaged in felling, cross-cutting and hilling up longitude, chopping firewood, harvesting and cutting stump resin, as well as harvesting wood using hand tools

284. Loader-dumper of timber, engaged in the creation of inter-operational and seasonal stocks of tree trunks and trees, loading trees, tree trunks and round timber (with the exception of balance sheets, a mine rack and firewood up to 2 meters long) onto a timber rolling stock and unloading them, performing work manually

285. Choker

Timber rafting

Work performed by profession:

287. Rigger engaged in loading and unloading rigging

288. Raft shaper

XXI. PRODUCTION OF PULP, PAPER, CARDBOARD AND PRODUCTS FROM THEM

Work performed by profession:

289. Operator for the preparation of chemical solutions, engaged in the dissolution of chlorine

290. Impregnation operator engaged in the production of anti-corrosion and inhibition paper

291. Fibrous cooker

292. Pulp cook

293. Treesteam

294. Pyrite crusher

295. Loader of balances in defibrers

296. Loader of pyrites, sulfur furnaces and turms

297. Sulphate loader

298. Acid

299. Mixer

300. Acid tank builder

301. Fiber sawmill

302. Impregnation of paper and paper products, engaged in the impregnation of fiber

303. Sulfuric acid regenerator

304. Repairman, lubricator, cleaner of industrial and office space, an electrician for the repair and maintenance of electrical equipment, engaged in the production of sulfite pulp and sulfurous acid

305. Cooper

306. Dryer of a paper (cardboard) machine, employed on high-speed paper and paperboard machines operating at a speed of 400 or more meters per minute

307. Chlorist

XXIII. CEMENT PRODUCTION

308. Work performed by workers in the cleaning of sludge pools and talkers

XXIII. STONE PROCESSING AND PRODUCTION OF STONE MOLDING PRODUCTS

Work performed by profession:

309. Stone pourer

310. Stonesmith

311. Stonecutter

312. Mill driver, busy breaking diabase crushed stone into powder

313. Stone processing equipment adjuster

314. Stone sawer

315. Stone cutter

XXIV. PRODUCTION OF REINFORCED CONCRETE AND CONCRETE PRODUCTS AND STRUCTURES

316. Work as a cutter of concrete and reinforced concrete products

XXV. PRODUCTION OF THERMAL INSULATION MATERIALS

Work performed by profession:

317. Bitumen worker

318. Cupola worker

XXVI. PRODUCTION OF SOFT ROOFING AND WATERPROOFING MATERIALS

319. Works performed by the loader of digesters

XXVII. MANUFACTURE OF GLASS AND GLASS PRODUCTS

Work performed by profession:

320. Kvartseduv (except engaged in the manufacture of products with a diameter of up to 100 mm and a wall thickness of up to 3 mm)

321. Quartz Smelter

322. Mirror dyer working with mercury

323. Composer of the charge, engaged in manual work using minium lead

324. Halmovator

XXVIII. TEXTILE AND LIGHT INDUSTRY

Works performed by the general professions of textile production:

325. Sizing equipment operator engaged in non-mechanized lifting and removal of rollers

326. Plumber, busy cleaning sewer trenches and wells

Cotton primary processing

327. Work as a presser

Hemp-jute production

328. Work as a fiber preparer, engaged in breaking bales of jute

wool production

Work performed by profession:

329. Industrial cloth washer

330. Assistant master, employed in the weaving shop in the production of cloth

Felting and felt production

Work performed by profession:

331. Fuller engaged in the manufacture of dense felts

332. Shoe fitter engaged in manual work

333. Shoe remover from the lasts, engaged in the removal of felted shoes by hand

Leather and leather production

335. Transportation, unloading and loading of large leather raw materials and semi-finished products manually in the soaking and ash shops of tanneries Works performed by professions:

336. Skinning worker engaged in manual turning of large leathers on logs, in skinning and breaking down large leather raw materials

337. Roller of skins, employed in the rolling of large and hard skins on skating rinks

338. Raw hide cutter

339. Sorter of products, semi-finished products and materials, engaged in sorting large leather raw materials

340. Cleaner of products, semi-finished products and materials, engaged in manual cleaning of large leathers and large raw hides on logs

Manufacture of leather shoes

341. Work as a molder of parts and products employed on Anklepf-type machines

XXIX. FOOD INDUSTRY

342. Baling of corrugated production waste Works performed by general professions of food production:

343. Diffusion operator servicing intermittent diffusers when loading manually

344. Ice harvester, engaged in harvesting ice in reservoirs and laying it in riots

345. Bone charcoal maker

Production of meat products

Work performed by profession:

347. Cattle fighter engaged in operations of stunning, picking up, bleeding of cattle and small cattle and pigs; gutting, shooting cattle skins by hand; sawing carcasses; scalds and singes of pig carcasses and heads; processing of carcasses of cattle in a horizontal way

348. Skinner

349. Hide processor

350. All types of work on fishing, search and receiving and transport ships, with the exception of sea floating crab and fish canning plants, fish processing bases, large freezing fishing trawlers and refrigerated ships, where the work of women is allowed in all jobs, excluding jobs (professions, positions) specified in sections XXXII "Sea transport" and XXXIII "River transport" of this list

351. Turning barrels with fish by hand Work performed by profession:

352. Loader-unloader of food products, engaged in loading grates with canned food into autoclaves manually

353. Processor of a sea animal engaged in the skinning of skins of a sea animal

354. A fish processor engaged in manual pouring and unloading of fish from vats, chests, ships, slots and other waterways; mixing fish in salted vats by hand

355. Presser-squeezer of food products, engaged in the pressing (squeezing) of fish in barrels by hand

356. Receiver of watercraft

357. Coastal fisherman engaged in manual hauling of cast nets, ice fishing with cast nets, fixed nets and venters

Bakery production

358. Work performed by a tester employed on dough mixers with rolling bowls with a capacity of more than 330 liters when moving them manually

Tobacco-makhorka and fermentation production

359. Work performed by an auxiliary worker engaged in transporting bales of tobacco

Perfumery and cosmetics production

360. Work performed by a worker engaged in the grinding of amidochloric mercury

Extraction and production of table salt

Work performed by profession:

361. Salt loader in pools

362. Pool preparer

363. Track worker on the lake

XXX. RAILWAY AND METRO

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

364. Accumulator repairer of lead batteries

365. A trolley driver and his assistant working on broad gauge railway lines

366. Freight train conductor

367. Stoker locomotives in the depot

368. Diesel train driver and his assistant

369. Engine driver and his assistant working on broad gauge railway lines

370. Locomotive driver and his assistant

371. Locomotive driver and his assistant

372. The driver of the traction unit and his assistant

373. Electric locomotive driver and his assistant

374. Electric train driver and his assistant

375. Track fitter

376. Porter engaged in the movement of luggage and hand luggage

377. Inspector-repairer of wagons

378. Punch-blow pipe

379. Conductor for escorting cargo and special wagons, engaged in escorting cargo on open rolling stock

380. Washer of steam locomotive boilers

381. Impregnation of lumber and wood products, engaged in impregnation with the use of oil antiseptics

382. Speed ​​controller of carriages

383. A mechanic for the repair of rolling stock, performing the work: to repair the headset on steam locomotives during their warm washing; in fire and smoke boxes; for blowing the bottom and gutters of electric rolling stock and diesel locomotives with electric transmission; for disassembly, repair and assembly of drain devices and safety valves, for inspection and filling of valves of drain devices in tanks from oil products and chemical products

384. Train Builder, Assistant Train Builder

385. Electrician of the contact network, employed on electrified railways working at height

386. Asbestos waste loading workers permanently working in the asbestos waste ballast quarry

XXXI. AUTOMOBILE TRANSPORT

Work performed by profession:

387. A car driver working on a bus with more than 14 seats (except for those employed in intra-factory, intra-city, suburban transportation and transportation in countryside within one day shift, subject not to involvement in maintenance and bus repairs)

388. A driver of a car working on a car with a carrying capacity of more than 2.5 tons (except for those employed in intra-factory, intra-city, suburban transportation and transportation in rural areas within one day shift, provided that they are not involved in the maintenance and repair of a truck)

389. Automotive mechanic hand washing engine parts of a car running on leaded gasoline

390. A car mechanic working on an engine break-in using leaded gasoline

391. Mechanic for fuel equipment, employed in car fleets for repairs fuel equipment carburetor engines running on leaded gasoline

XXXII. SEA TRANSPORT

392. Coastal boatswain, coastal sailor, senior coastal sailor (with the exception of local and suburban lines working at passenger berths)

393. Ship fireman and boiler engineer engaged in servicing boilers on ships and cranes, regardless of the type of fuel burned in boilers

394. Cranemaster and his assistant

395. Crane operator (crane operator), employed on a floating crane, and his assistant

396. Machine officers (mechanics, electromechanics and others) and machine crew (machinists, mechanics, electricians, turners and locksmiths of all types and others) of ships of all types of fleet

397. Deck crew (boatswain, skipper, assistant skipper and sailors of all types) of ships of all types of fleet, as well as floating cleaning stations, docks, floating loaders of grain, cement, coal and other dusty cargo

398. Workers of integrated teams and loaders engaged in loading and unloading operations in ports and marinas

399. Crew members of all types of the fleet, combining work in two positions of deck and engine personnel

XXXIII. RIVER TRANSPORT

Work performed by profession and position:

400. Loaders, dockers-machine operators (except for dockers-machine operators permanently working as crane operators, drivers of intraport transport and workers servicing machines and mechanisms of continuous action in the processing of goods, with the exception of substances belonging to hazard classes 1 and 2)

401. Ship's stoker employed on solid fuel ships

402. Sailors of all types of passenger and cargo-passenger ships (with the exception of hydrofoil and gliding ships, as well as ships operating on intra-city and suburban lines), dredgers, dredgers and ships of mixed "river-sea" navigation

403. Crane operator (crane operator) employed on a floating crane

404. Engine crew of ships of all types of fleet, as well as crew members of ships of all types of fleet, combining work in two positions of deck and engine personnel

XXXIV. CIVIL AVIATION

Works performed by professions and certain categories of workers:

405. Aviation mechanic (technician) for airframe and engines, aviation mechanic (technician) for instruments and electrical equipment, aviation mechanic (technician) for radio equipment, aviation technician (mechanic) for parachutes and rescue equipment, aviation technician for fuels and lubricants , engineer directly involved in the maintenance of aircraft (helicopters)

411. Works on casting operations and finishing of the stereotype Works performed by professions:

412. Adjuster of printing equipment, employed in the areas of casting stereotypes, type, typesetting and blank materials

413. Caster

414. Stereotyper

Gravure printing workshops

415. Work in the printing department of intaglio printing (except for the acceptance and packaging of finished products)

416. Work done by a gravure plate etcher

XXXVII. MANUFACTURE OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

417. Peeling and cleaning of cast-iron frames of pianos and grand pianos on abrasive wheels

418. Work performed by a manufacturer of parts for wind instruments, engaged in the manufacture of parts for brass instruments

XXXVIII. AGRICULTURE

419. Operations in crop production, animal husbandry, poultry farming and fur farming with the use of pesticides, pesticides and disinfectants (under the age of 35)

420. Servicing sires, sires, boars

421. Loading and unloading animal corpses, confiscated goods and pathological material

422. Work in wells, slurry tanks and cisterns, silos and haylage towers

423. Work as tractor drivers in agricultural production

424. Working as truck drivers

425. Skinning from the corpses of cattle, horses and cutting carcasses

426. Transportation, loading and unloading of pesticides

427. Laying drainage tubes by hand

XXXIX. WORKS PERFORMED IN VARIOUS SECTORS OF THE ECONOMY

428. Cleaning, sanding and painting works in ship and railway tanks, ship liquid fuel tanks and oil tankers, cofferdams, fore and after peaks, chain boxes, double-bottom and double-board spaces and other hard-to-reach places

429. Painting work using white lead, lead sulphate or other compounds containing these dyes

430. Installation, repair and maintenance of contact networks, as well as overhead power lines when working at a height of more than 10 m

431. Direct extinguishing of fires

432. Maintenance of floating facilities, dredgers with ship rigging

433. Cleaning of containers (reservoirs, measuring tanks, tanks, barges, etc.) from sour oil, products of its processing and sulfur-containing petroleum gas

434. Work with metallic mercury in the open (except for workers employed in installations and semi-automatic devices, where effective air exchange is ensured at the workplace)

435. Composition of a mixture of gasoline with ethyl liquid

436. Cleaning of mercury rectifiers Work performed by profession:

437. Antenna mast

438. Bitumen cooker

439. Snowmobile driver

440. Diver

441. Gas rescuer

442. Mercury dispenser busy manually dosing exposed mercury

443. Wood splitter engaged in manual work

444. Boiler repairer of hot boilers

445. Cauldron cleaner

446. Painter engaged in the preparation of lead paints by hand

447. Painter employed inside containers painting using paints and varnishes containing lead, aromatic and chlorinated hydrocarbons, as well as painting large-sized products in closed chambers with a spray gun using the same paints and varnishes

448. Crane operator (crane operator) engaged in work at sea

449. The driver (fireman) of the boiler house, engaged in servicing steam and hot water boilers when loaded manually with the cost per change of solid mineral and peat fuel per driver (fireman), exceeding the established norms of maximum allowable loads for women when lifting and moving heavy loads manually

450. Parachutist (paratrooper-firefighter)

451. Workers of the engine crew of floating cranes

452. Pitch grinder

453. Repairman of artificial structures

454. Locksmith of emergency and restoration work, employed in the work of cleaning the sewer network

455. Rigger engaged in the installation and dismantling of equipment

456. Cleaner engaged in cleaning pipes, furnaces and gas ducts

Notes:

1. An employer may decide on the use of women's labor in jobs (professions, positions) included in this list, provided that safe working conditions are created, confirmed by the results of attestation of workplaces, with a positive conclusion from the state examination of working conditions and the State Sanitary and Epidemiological Supervision Service of the constituent entity of the Russian Federation.

2. The list of positions of managers, specialists and other workers associated with underground work, in which, as an exception, the use of female labor is allowed:

general director, director, head, technical manager, manager, chief engineer of mines and pits in the extraction of coal, ore and non-metallic minerals by the underground method, in the construction of the subway, tunnels, mine construction and mine sinking departments, construction and construction and installation departments and construction and other underground structures, their deputies and assistants;

chief, chief engineer of mining shops and sections, their deputies and assistants;

senior engineer, engineer, technician, other managers, specialists and employees who do not perform physical work;

engineer, technician, laboratory assistant, other specialists and employees who do not perform physical work and with a non-permanent stay underground;

chief surveyor, senior surveyor, mine surveyor, mine, mine surveyor; chief geologist, chief hydrogeologist, chief hydrologist, geologist of the mine, mines, geologist, hydrogeologist of the mine, mines, hydrogeologist, hydrologist;

workers servicing stationary mechanisms with automatic start and stop, and not performing other work related to physical activity;

employees undergoing training and admitted to internships in the underground parts of organizations;

employees of scientific and educational institutions, design and design organizations;

a doctor, middle and junior medical personnel, a bartender and other workers involved in sanitary and domestic services.

Unofficial edition

GOVERNMENT OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION

RESOLUTION

ON APPROVAL OF THE LIST

USE OF WOMEN'S LABOR

In accordance with Article 10 of the Federal Law "On the Fundamentals

labor protection in the Russian Federation" (Collection of Legislation

Russian Federation, 1999, N 29, art. 3702) government

Russian Federation decides:

Approve the attached list of heavy work and work with

harmful or dangerous working conditions, under which

the employment of women is prohibited.

Prime Minister

Russian Federation

Approved

Government Decree

Russian Federation

SCROLL

HARD WORK AND WORK WITH HARMFUL OR DANGEROUS

WORKING CONDITIONS WHICH ARE PROHIBITED

USE OF WOMEN'S LABOR

I. Work related to lifting and moving

weights by hand

1. Work related to lifting and moving heavy loads

manually, in case of exceeding the established norms

II. Underground works

2. Underground work in the mining industry and

construction of underground structures, with the exception of works,

carried out by women in leadership positions and not

performing physical work; women involved in sanitation and

household services; women undergoing training and

admitted to internships in the underground parts of the organization;

women who must descend from time to time into the underground

parts of the organization to perform work of a non-physical nature

(list of positions of managers, specialists and other

allowed, as an exception, the use of female labor,

given in paragraph 2 of the notes to this list)

III. metalworking

Foundry works

3. Cupola worker

4. Casting beater engaged in manual knockout

5. Burden loader in cupolas and furnaces, busy loading the charge

6. Casting welder

7. Metal pourer

8. Cutter engaged in work with pneumatic tools

9. Melter of metal and alloys

10. Workers involved in hanging hot castings on a conveyor and

maintenance and repair of equipment in the tunnels of foundries

Welding

11. Gas welder and electric welder of manual welding, working in

closed containers (tanks, boilers, etc.), as well as on high-rise

communication facilities (towers, masts) over 10 meters and climbing

Boiler rooms, cold forging, drawing

and pressing works

Work performed by profession:

12. Boilermaker

13. Turner on turning - spinning machines, employed at work

14. Chaser employed at work with manual pneumatic

tool

Forging and pressing and thermal works

Work performed by profession:

15. Bandezhnik engaged in hot work

16. Springer engaged in hot work when winding springs

from wire with a diameter of more than 10 mm

17. Roller, busy rolling rings in a hot state

18. Hot metal springer

Metal plating and painting

19. Sealing inside the caisson - tanks

20. Continuous hot lead work (not

galvanized)

Locksmith and locksmith - assembly work

Work performed by profession:

21. Driller - pneumatic, doing the work

pneumatic tool that transmits vibration to the hands of the worker

22. Locksmith - repairman, busy:

adjustment of equipment in workshops and departments: hot-rolling,

pickling, enamelling, isolation using

organosilicon varnishes, lead coating in cable production;

on hot repair of selenium and shoping machines

(equipment);

adjustment of equipment in workshops and departments of preparation and

the use of organosilicon varnishes and varnishes containing 40 and

more than a percent of toluene, xylene;

repair of equipment in closed fuel depots and

oil farms at thermal power plants, as well as repair

equipment in tunnels and heating chambers in thermal

maintenance of water jacket ovens in the production of non-ferrous

metals and alloys;

adjustment and repair of hot molds;

directly in the workshops: milling, spreading,

forming, foundry, pipe stuffing, slurry and

assembly line in the production of lead batteries;

repair of technological equipment at motor test

stations operating on leaded gasoline and located in

Works with lead

23. Smelting, casting, rolling, broaching and stamping

lead products, as well as leaded cables and soldering lead

batteries

IV. Construction, assembly

and repair and construction works

24. Hot repair of furnaces and boiler furnaces

25. Uprooting stumps

26. Fastening of structures and parts using building

Mounting gun

27. Paving, demolition of buildings and structures

28. Punching holes (furrows, niches, etc.) in concrete,

reinforced concrete and stone (brick) structures manually and with

using pneumatic tools

Work performed by profession:

29. Fitting worker engaged in the manual installation of frames, manual,

bending machines and shears

30. Asphalt concrete worker, asphalt concrete worker - welder employed in

manual work

31. Hydromonitor

32. A digger engaged in sinking wells

33. Bricklayer engaged in masonry modular

solid silicate brick

34. Roofer on steel roofs

35. Caisson worker - apparatchik, caisson worker - tunneller, caisson worker -

locksmith, caisson worker - electrician

36. Motor grader driver

37. Asphalt distributor driver, truck driver

38. Concrete pump operator, machinist

mobile bitumen melting plant

39. Bulldozer driver

40. Grader driver - elevator

41. Mobile asphalt mixer driver

42. Asphalt paver driver

43. Single bucket excavator driver, excavator driver

rotary (ditcher and trencher)

44. The driver of an electric welding mobile unit with

internal combustion engine

45. Mobile power station driver working on

power plants with an internal combustion engine with a capacity of 150

hp and more

46. ​​Communications installer - antenna operator, busy working at height

47. Assembler for the installation of steel and reinforced concrete structures

when working at height and climbing

48. Solderer for lead (lead solderer)

49. Carpenter

50. Locksmith - a plumber engaged in the repair of sewer

51. Pipe laying of industrial reinforced concrete pipes

52. Piping of industrial brick pipes

V. Mining

Open pit mining and surface operating

and mines under construction, enrichment, agglomeration,

briquetting

Works performed in the general professions of mining and

mining works:

53. Hole driller

54. Explosive, master explosives

55. Miner for the prevention and extinguishing of fires

56. Delivery of fixing materials to the mine

57. Fastener

58. Blacksmith - driller

59. Drilling rig operator

60. Loader driver

61. Machine operator for drilling mine shafts with a full section

62. Excavator driver

63. Tipper engaged in manual rolling and rolling of trolleys

64. Drifter

65. Stem, busy feeding trolleys into the stands manually

way

66. Cleaner busy cleaning bunkers

67. Electrician (mechanic) on duty and repair

equipment, maintenance and repair of equipment,

mechanisms, water and air lines in mining

Works performed by general enrichment professions,

agglomeration, briquetting and certain categories of workers:

68. Crusher engaged in crushing hot pitch in

alumina production

69. Calciner engaged in the process of burning raw materials and

materials in mercury production

70. Workers and masters of concentrating and crushing -

sorting plants, mines, mines and metallurgical

enterprises engaged in crushing, grinding, grinding

and blending of ores of ferrous, non-ferrous and rare metals, hydrofluoric

spar and coal, which produce dust containing 10 percent

and more free silicon dioxide, when working manually

71. Workers employed in lead enrichment shops

72. Workers and foremen engaged in the enrichment of niobium

(loparite) ores

Construction of subways, tunnels and underground

special purpose facilities

Work performed by profession:

73. Mining Equipment Installer

74. Drifter on surface work

Ore mining

Work performed by profession:

75. Placer Miner

76. Chisel Loader

77. Drager

78. Dredge sailor

79. Dredge driver

80. Rocket driver

Extraction and processing of peat

Work performed by profession:

81. Ditcher

82. Grubber

83. Machine operator for the extraction and processing of sod peat

84. The driver of machines for the preparation of peat deposits for

exploitation

85. Peat excavator driver

86. Peat worker, busy felling trees, on the pavement

peat bricks

Processing of brown coal and ozocerite ores

Work performed by profession:

87. Mountain wax production operator

88. Operator for the production of ozokerite and ozokerite products

89. Crusher

90. Briquette press operator

91. Filling machine operator

VI. Exploration

and topographic - geodetic works

Work performed by profession:

92. Explosive, master explosives

93. Installer of geodetic signs

94. Electrician (mechanic) on duty and repair

field equipment

VII. Drilling of the wells

Work performed by profession:

95. Driller of operational and exploratory drilling of wells

for oil and gas

96. Vyshkomontazhnik, vyshkomontazhnik - welder, vyshkomontazhnik -

electrician

97. Drilling rig operator

98. Well Cementing Engineer

99. Cementing unit minder, cement minder -

sand mixing unit

100. Pipe presser

101. Assistant driller of operational and exploration

drilling wells for oil and gas (first)

102. Assistant driller of operational and exploration

well drilling for oil and gas (second)

103. Drilling mud preparer busy preparing

solution manually

104. Drilling rig maintenance fitter, directly employed

on drilling

105. Locksmith - a repairman engaged in the repair of drilling

equipment

106. Toollock installer

107. Electrician for maintenance of drilling rigs

VIII. Oil and gas

Works performed by professions and certain categories

employees:

108. Workover driller

109. Driller of a floating drilling unit at sea

110. Steam mobile dewaxing operator

installations

111. Mobile compressor driver

112. Lift driver

113. Flushing machine driver

114. Hydraulic fracturing operator

115. Well preparation operator for capital and

underground repairs

116. Underground well workover operator

117. Operator for chemical treatment of wells

118. Well Workover Driller Assistant

119. Assistant driller of a floating drilling unit at sea

120. Workers, managers and specialists permanently employed

underground oil production

121. Locksmith for the installation and repair of the foundations of offshore drilling and

122. Locksmith - repairman engaged in installation and maintenance

technological equipment and repair of oilfield

equipment

123. Electrician for repair and maintenance

electrical equipment, engaged in maintenance and repair

technological equipment

IX. Ferrous metallurgy

124. Ladle, employed in work with molten metal

125. Metal heater, employed at work in methodical,

chamber furnaces and wells of rolling and pipe production

126. Processor of surface defects of metal, engaged in

work with pneumatic tools

Domain production

Work performed by profession:

127. Horse blast furnace

128. Blast furnace plumber

129. Hearth blast furnace

130. Driver wagon - scales

131. Skipova

Steelmaking

Work performed by profession:

132. Filling machine operator

133. Mixer

134. Blocker

135. Furnace reduction of iron and annealing of iron powders

136. Melter of deoxidizers

137. Converter's assistant steelworker

138. Handy steelworker open-hearth furnace

139. Assistant steelmaker of the electroslag remelting plant

140. Electric furnace steelworker's assistant

141. Caster of steel

142. Converter steelmaker

143. Open-hearth furnace steelmaker

144. Steelmaker of electroslag remelting plant

145. Electric furnace steelmaker

rolling production

Work performed by profession:

146. Roller of hot rolling mill

147. Pitch cooker

148. Hot rolling mill assistant

149. Presser - stitcher of rail fasteners

150. Locksmith - a conductor employed in a section rolling

production

Pipe production

Work performed by profession:

151. Sizing mill roller

152. Roller of hot-rolled pipe mill

153. Roller of furnace pipe welding mill

154. Roller of cold-rolled pipe mill

155. Pipe mill roller

156. Pipe drawer employed on non-mechanized mills

157. Pipe calibrator on the press

158. Blacksmith on hammers and presses

159. Handy roller mill of hot-rolled pipes

160. Handy rolling mill for cold-rolled pipes

Ferroalloy production

Works performed by professions and certain categories

161. Hearth ferroalloy furnaces

162. Smelter engaged in melting and granulation of molten

vanadium pentoxide

163. Ferroalloy smelter

164. Workers engaged in the smelting of silicon alloys in open

arc furnaces

165. Workers engaged in the production of chromium metal and

Coke production

166. Work related to direct employment in

benzene production, hydrotreatment and distillation

Work performed by profession:

167. Barillet

168. Door

169. Crusher

170. Lukovoi

171. Scrubber - a pumper engaged in the maintenance of phenol

installations in the shop for catching coking products

172. Locksmith - a repairman engaged in the maintenance of coke ovens

X. Non-ferrous metallurgy

Works performed by general professions:

173. Anode pourer, engaged in pouring bottom sections of anodes

in the production of aluminum, silumin and silicon

174. Fitter on the repair of bathtubs, busy drilling

recesses for the cathode rod in the production of aluminum, silumin

and silicon

175. Melter

176. Calciner

177. Locksmith - repairman, electrician for repairs and

maintenance of electrical equipment, employed in the main

metallurgical shops

178. Sinterer

179. A shifter working at furnaces in the production of tin

Production of non-ferrous and rare metals,

production of powders from non-ferrous metals

180. Works performed by workers and craftsmen engaged in

workshops (departments and sites) for the production of tetrachloride

titanium (tetrachloride)

181. Works performed by workers and craftsmen engaged in

workshops for chlorination of loparite concentrate

182. Works performed by workers and foremen engaged in

workshops (departments and sites) for the recovery of tetrachloride and

metal separation in the production of metallic titanium

183. Works performed by workers and foremen engaged in

departments (on sites) of chlorination and rectification of titanium

raw materials (slag)

184. Work performed by workers employed in the department

processing of slag by sublimation at a fuming plant in

tin production

185. Work performed by workers employed in smelters

workshops, as well as for the processing of cinders in the production of mercury

Work performed by profession:

186. Anode in aluminum production

187. Titanium sponge beater

188. Pourer - pourer of metal

189. Cathodic

190. Converter

191. Capacitor

192. Installer of reaction apparatus, engaged in the installation and

dismantling baths and furnaces, repairing and restoring reaction

devices

193. Mercury Beater

194. Furnace in the production of zinc dust

195. Furnace on Welz stoves

196. Pechevoi on reduction and distillation of titanium and rare

metals

197. Furnace for recovery of nickel powder

198. Furnace for processing titanium-containing and rare-earth

materials

199. Sludger of electrolyte baths, busy cleaning baths by hand

way

200. Molten salt cell

Forming non-ferrous metals

201. Work performed by a hot metal rolling worker employed

in rolling of non-ferrous metals and their alloys

Production of aluminum by electrolytic method

202. Work performed by workers and foremen

Alumina production

203. The work performed by the operator of material handling equipment employed on

repair work in hard-to-reach places of pneumatic and

hydraulic loaders

XI. Repair of equipment of power plants and networks

Work performed by profession:

204. Electrician for the repair of overhead power lines,

engaged in climbing work repairing high-voltage lines

power transmission

205. Electrician for the repair and installation of cable lines,

engaged in the repair of cable glands with lead litharge and soldering

lead cable sleeves and sheaths

XII. Production of abrasives

Work performed by profession:

206. Balancer - filler of abrasive circles, busy

lead-filled abrasive products

207. Bulldozer driver employed in the hot dismantling of furnaces

resistance in the production of abrasives

208. Melter of abrasive materials

209. A miner employed in a corundum shop

210. Disassembler of resistance furnaces, employed in the workshop

silicon carbide production

XIII. Electrical production

Works performed by general professions:

211. Mercury Distiller

212. Shaper of mercury rectifiers, performing work with

open mercury

Electric coal production

213. Work performed by workers in the smelting of pitch

cable production

Work performed by profession:

214. Presser of cables with lead or aluminum, employed

hot pressing with lead

215. Stripper of sheaths from cable products, busy filming

only lead sheaths

Production of chemical current sources

Work performed by profession:

216. Caster of products from lead alloys

217. Dry mass mixer (for lead batteries)

218. Smelter of lead alloys

219. The cutter of battery plates, engaged in stamping -

separation of molded lead plates

XIV. Radio engineering and electronic production

Work performed by profession:

220. Tester of parts and instruments, engaged in testing

devices in thermal vacuum chambers at a temperature of +28 degrees. From and above and

60 deg. C and below, subject to direct presence in them

221. Caster of magnets on furnaces - crystallizers

222. Smelter of shoopsalloy and bismuth

XV. Production and repair of aircraft

Work performed by profession:

223. Aircraft engine repairman and repairman

units engaged in the repair of motors and units operating on

leaded gasoline

XVI. Shipbuilding and ship repair

Work performed by profession:

224. Reinforcing concrete ships, busy working on

vibrating tables, vibrating platforms, cassette units and with manual

vibrators

225. Ship bender employed in hot bending

226. Ship's boilermaker

227. Painter, ship insulator, employed in painting work in

tanks, second bottom area, warm boxes and other

hard-to-reach areas of ships, as well as during cleaning works

old paint in the indicated areas of the vessels

228. Coppersmith for the manufacture of ship products, employed in

hot jobs

229. Ship carpenter working in closed compartments of ships

230. Employees of the commissioning team at mooring, factory and

state tests

231. Ship's chopper, employed at work with manual

pneumatic tool

232. Metal ship hull assembler employed in

sectional, block and slipway assembly of surface vessels with

constant combination of their work with electric tack,

gas cutting and metal processing with manual pneumatic

tools, as well as in the repair of ships

233. Locksmith - mechanic for testing installations and equipment,

engaged in the adjustment and testing of marine diesel engines in closed

premises and inside courts

234. Locksmith - fitter ship, employed in the installation inside

ships under repair

235. Locksmith - ship repairer, employed at work inside ships

236. Shipbuilder - repairman

237. Ship rigger

238. Pipeline ship

XVII. Chemical production

Works performed in chemical industries by profession and

239. Melting operator engaged in melting and refining

240. A steamer engaged in tearing - stripping rubber

Production of non-organic products

Calcium carbide production

241. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

furnaces and manual crushing of carbide

Phosgene production

242. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of mercury and its compounds

243. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages, except for productions with remote

management

Production of yellow phosphorus

244. Workers, shift managers and specialists,

directly engaged in the maintenance of shaft slotted furnaces,

roasting and sintering furnaces, fines granulation plants, in

phosphorus electric sublimation departments, filling phosphorus

tanks, maintenance of storage tanks of phosphorus, phosphoric

sludge, sludge distillation and flammable slag processing

Production of phosphorus trichloride

and phosphorus pentasulphide

245. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of chlorine by the mercury method

246. Workers employed at technological stages

Production of liquid chlorine and chlorine dioxide

247. Workers employed at technological stages

Carbon disulfide production

248. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

compartments: retort and condensation

Works with fluorine, hydrogen fluoride and fluorides

249. Workers, managers and specialists (except for works

performed in laboratories using hydrofluoric acid and

fluorides)

Production of arsenic and arsenic compounds

250. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Silicon tetrachloride production

251. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Industrial iodine production

252. Workers engaged in the extraction of iodine

Production of organic products

Production of benzatron and its chlorine

and bromo derivatives, vilontron

253. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of aniline, paranitroaniline,

aniline salts and fluxes

254. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of benzidine and its analogues

255. Workers, managers, specialists and other employees,

employed directly in production and at the dissolution station

specified products

Production of carbon tetrachloride,

golovaks, rematola, sovol

256. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Chloropicrin production

257. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of catalysts containing arsenic

258. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of cyram, mercury-

259. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Chloroprene production

260. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of chloroprene rubber and latex

261. Workers employed in the technological stages of polymerization

and product isolation

Production of ethyl liquid

262. Workers, managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Production of benzene, toluene, xylene

263. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Paint and varnish production

Production of lead litharge and red lead, lead

kronov, white, lead green and yarmedyanka

264. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

technological stages

Manufacture of chemical fibers and threads

265. Regeneration operator engaged in regeneration

carbon disulfide

Manufacture of fiberglass products based on

synthetic resins (phenol-formaldehyde,

epoxy, unsaturated polyester resins)

266. Operators employed in contact molding

large-sized products with an area of ​​​​1.5 square meters. m and more

Production of medicines, medical, biological

preparations and materials

Production of antibiotics

267. Filtration operator engaged in filter disassembly and assembly

Presses with frames over 500 mm manually

Obtaining morphine from raw opium

268. Filtration operator engaged in disassembly and assembly

filter - presses with a frame size of more than 500 mm manually

Androgen production

269. Operator for the production of synthetic hormones, busy

preparations of testosterone and its derivatives

XVIII. Production and processing of rubber compounds

Work performed by profession:

270. A vulcanizer engaged in loading, unloading products in

boilers with a length of more than 6 meters, vulcanization of propeller shafts

271. Rubber mixer driver

272. Workers employed in departments: cold vulcanization,

elaboration of radol and facts

273. Repairer of rubber products, engaged in the manufacture

and repair of large rubber parts and products, on

vulcanization of reinforced parts (large tires, rubber

fuel tanks, reservoirs, conveyor belts, etc.)

Production, retreading and repair of tires

274. Works performed by a vulcanizer, tire assembler

(heavy)

XIX. Oil, gas, shale and coal processing, generation

synthetic petroleum products, petroleum oils and lubricants

Works performed by professions and certain categories

employees:

275. Coke cleaner

276. Coke unloader

277. Workers, shift managers and specialists employed in

process units for leaded gasoline

278. Workers employed in extraction shops and departments

production of aromatic hydrocarbons

279. Workers involved in the preparation of arsenic solutions at

sulphurous petroleum gas treatment

XX. Logging and timber rafting

logging work

280. Loading and unloading of round timber (for

except for balances, a mine rack and firewood up to 2 meters long)

281. Stacking round timber (excluding

balances, a mine rack and firewood up to 2 meters long)

Work performed by profession:

282. Logger

283. Lumberjack engaged in felling, bucking whips and

hilling longitude, chopping firewood, harvesting and cutting stump

pitching, as well as harvesting wood using manual

tools

284. Loader - a loader of timber, engaged in the creation

inter-operational and seasonal stocks of tree trunks and trees, loading

trees, logs and round timber (excluding

balances, a mine rack and firewood up to 2 meters long) on

timber rolling stock and their unloading, performing work

285. Choker

Timber rafting

Work performed by profession:

286. Alloyer

287. Rigger engaged in loading and unloading rigging

288. Raft shaper

XXI. Production of pulp, paper,

cardboard and products from them

Work performed by profession:

289. Operator for the preparation of chemical solutions, employed in

dissolving chlorine

290. Impregnation operator employed in production

anti-corrosion and inhibition paper

291. Fibrous cooker

292. Pulp cook

293. Treesteam

294. Pyrite crusher

295. Loader of balances in defibrers

296. Loader of pyrites, sulfur furnaces and turms

297. Sulphate loader

298. Acid

299. Mixer

300. Acid tank builder

301. Fiber sawmill

302. Impregnator of paper and paper products engaged in impregnation

303. Sulfuric acid regenerator

304. Locksmith - repairman, oiler, cleaner of industrial and

office space, electrician for repair and maintenance

electrical equipment engaged in the production of sulfite pulp and

sulfurous acid

305. Cooper

306. Dryer of a paper (cardboard) machine,

employed in high-speed paper and board making

machines operating at speeds of 400 or more meters per minute

307. Chlorist

XXII. Cement production

308. Work performed by workers in the treatment of sludge

pools and chatterboxes

XXIII. Stone processing and production

stone products

Work performed by profession:

309. Stone pourer

310. Stonesmith

311. Stonecutter

312. Mill driver engaged in breaking diabase rubble in

313. Stone processing equipment adjuster

314. Stone sawer

315. Stone cutter

XXIV. Production of reinforced concrete

and concrete products and structures

316. Work as a cutter of concrete and reinforced concrete products

XXV. Production of thermal insulation materials

Work performed by profession:

317. Bitumen worker

318. Cupola worker

XXVI. Soft roof production

and waterproofing materials

319. Works performed by the loader of digesters

XXVII. Manufacture of glass and glass products

Work performed by profession:

320. Kvartseduv (except for those engaged in the manufacture of products with a diameter

up to 100 mm and wall thickness up to 3 mm)

321. Quartz Smelter

322. Mirror dyer working with mercury

323. Composer of the charge, engaged in manual work using

red lead

324. Halmovator

XXVIII. Textile and light industry

Works performed by the general professions of textile production:

325. Sizing equipment operator employed in

non-mechanized lifting and removal of rollers

326. Locksmith - a plumber engaged in cleaning sewer

trenches and wells

Cotton primary processing

327. Work as a presser

Penko - jute production

328. Work as a fiber preparer, engaged in breaking bales

wool production

Work performed by profession:

329. Industrial cloth washer

330. Assistant master, employed in the weaving shop in production

Felting and felt production

Work performed by profession:

331. Fuller engaged in the manufacture of dense felts

332. Shoe fitter engaged in manual work

333. Shoe remover from the lasts, engaged in the removal of felted shoes

Leather and leather production

semi-finished products in tanning, dyeing and fat drums

335. Transportation, unloading and loading of large leather

raw materials and semi-finished products manually in the cleaning and ash shops

tanneries

Work performed by profession:

336. Scraper engaged in turning large leathers on decks

manually, on the skinning and breakdown of large leather raw materials

337. Roller of skins, engaged in the rolling of large and hard skins

on the skating rinks

338. Raw hide cutter

339. Sorter of products, semi-finished products and materials, busy

sorting of large leather raw materials

340. Cleaner of products, semi-finished products and materials, employed

cleaning of large leathers and large raw hides on decks

Manufacture of leather shoes

341. Work as a molder of parts and products employed on machines

type "Anklepf"

XXIX. food industry

342. Baling of corrugated production waste

Works performed in general professions of food production

products:

343. Diffusion operator servicing diffusers

periodic action when loading manually

344. Ice harvester engaged in the harvesting of ice in reservoirs and

stacking it up in riots

345. Bone Charcoal Maker

346. Cleaning machine operator engaged in dismantling

separators manually

Production of meat products

Work performed by profession:

347. Cattle fighter engaged in operations of stunning, hooking,

bleeding of large and small cattle and pigs;

gutting, shooting cattle skins by hand;

sawing carcasses; scalds and singes of pig carcasses and heads; carcass processing

cattle in a horizontal way

348. Skinner

349. Hide processor

Extraction and processing of fish

350. All types of work on fishing, search and receiving -

transport sea vessels, with the exception of marine floating

crab-fish canning factories, fish processing bases, large

freezing fishing trawlers and refrigerated marine vessels,

where the work of women is allowed in all jobs, excluding work

(professions, positions) specified in sections XXXII "Marine

transport" and XXXIII "River transport" of this list

351. Turning fish barrels by hand

Work performed by profession:

352. Loader - unloader of food products, engaged in

loading grates with canned food into autoclaves manually

353. Processor of a sea animal engaged in the skinning of skins

sea ​​animal

354. Fish processor engaged in pouring - unloading fish

manually from vats, chests, ships, slots and other navigable

containers; mixing fish in salted vats by hand

355. Presser - wringer of food products, employed in

pressing (squeezing) fish in barrels by hand

356. Receiver of watercraft

357. Coastal fisherman engaged in hand-drawn

nets, ice fishing on cast nets, fixed nets and

ventilation

Bakery production

358. Work performed by a tester employed in dough mixers

machines with rolling bowls with a capacity of more than 330 liters with

moving them manually

Tobacco - shag and fermentation production

359. Work performed by an auxiliary worker employed

transporting bales of tobacco

Perfumery - cosmetic production

360. Work performed by a worker engaged in grinding

amidochloric mercury

Extraction and production of table salt

Work performed by profession:

361. Salt loader in pools

362. Pool preparer

363. Track worker on the lake

XXX. Rail transport and metro

Works performed by professions and certain categories

364. Accumulator repairer of lead batteries

365. The driver of the trolley and his assistant, working on

366. Freight train conductor

367. Stoker locomotives in the depot

368. Diesel train driver and his assistant

369. The engine driver and his assistant, working on

broad gauge railway lines

370. Locomotive driver and his assistant

371. Locomotive driver and his assistant

372. The driver of the traction unit and his assistant

373. Electric locomotive driver and his assistant

374. Electric train driver and his assistant

375. The fitter of the path (if the established norms are exceeded,

permissible loads for women when lifting and moving heavy loads

376. Porter engaged in the movement of luggage and hand luggage

377. Inspector - repairman of wagons

378. Puncher - pipe blower

379. Conductor for escorting cargo and special wagons, busy

cargo escort on open rolling stock

380. Washer of steam locomotive boilers

381. Impregnation of lumber and wood products, employed

impregnated with oil antiseptics

382. Speed ​​controller of carriages

383. Rolling stock repairman performing

for the repair of headsets on steam locomotives during their warm washing;

in fire and smoke boxes;

for blowing out the bottom and gutters of the electric rolling stock and

locomotives with electric transmission;

for disassembly, repair and assembly of drain devices and

safety valves, for inspection and filling of drain valves

devices in tanks from under oil products and chemical products

384. Train Builder, Assistant Train Builder

385. The electrician of the contact network, employed on

electrified railways working at height

386. Workers loading asbestos waste, constantly

workers in the ballast quarry of asbestos waste

XXXI. Automobile transport

Work performed by profession:

387. Car driver working on a bus with a quantity

more than 14 places (except for those employed at intra-plant, intra-city,

suburban and rural transport in

within one day shift, provided that they are not involved in

maintenance and repair of the bus)

388. Car driver working on a car

with a carrying capacity of more than 2.5 tons (except for those employed in

intra-factory, intra-city, suburban transportation and

transportation in rural areas within one day shift,

subject to non-involvement in maintenance and performance

truck repair)

389. Car mechanic doing manual washing

engine parts of a car running on leaded gasoline

390. Car mechanic busy running

leaded gasoline engine

391. Mechanic for fuel equipment employed in car fleets

on the repair of fuel equipment of carburetor engines,

running on leaded gasoline

XXXII. Sea transport

392. Coastal boatswain, coastal sailor, senior sailor

coastal (except for those working on passenger berths

local and suburban lines)

393. Ship's stoker and boiler engineer engaged in maintenance

boilers on ships and cranes, regardless of the type

fuel burned in boilers

394. Cranemaster and his assistant

395. Crane operator (crane operator) employed on a floating crane, and

his assistant

396. Machine command staff (mechanics, electromechanics and

others) and the machine team (machinists, mechanics, electricians,

turners and locksmiths of all types and others) of all types of ships

397. Deck crew (boatswain, skipper, assistant skipper and

sailors of all types) of ships of all types of fleet, as well as

floating cleaning stations, docks, floating grain loaders,

cement, coal and other dusty goods

398. Workers of integrated teams and loaders employed in

loading and unloading operations in ports and marinas

399. Crew members of all types of the fleet, combining work on

two posts of deck and engine staff

XXXIII. River transport

Work performed by profession and position:

400. Loaders, dockers - machine operators (except for dockers -

machine operators permanently working as crane operators, drivers

intraport transport and workers servicing machines and

mechanisms of continuous action in the processing of goods, for

except for substances belonging to hazard classes 1 and 2)

401. Ship's stoker employed on ships powered by solid

402. Sailors of all types of passenger and

cargo-passenger ships (with the exception of hydrofoils

and gliding, as well as ships operating on intracity and

suburban lines), dredgers, dredgers and vessels of mixed

"river - sea" swimming

403. Crane operator (crane operator) employed on a floating crane

404. Engine crew of ships of all types of fleet, as well as members

crews of ships of all types of the fleet, combining work in two

positions of deck and engine personnel

XXXIV. civil Aviation

Works performed by professions and certain categories

405. Aviation mechanic (technician) for airframe and engines,

aircraft mechanic (technician) for instruments and electrical equipment,

aviation mechanic (technician) for radio equipment, aviation

technician (mechanic) for parachute and rescue

means, aviation technician for fuels and lubricants,

engineer directly involved in maintenance

airplanes (helicopters)

406. Porter engaged in the movement of luggage and hand luggage in

airports

407. The operator of gas stations, busy refueling

aircraft with leaded gasoline, as well as refueling

special vehicles with leaded gasoline

408. Workers involved in cleaning and repairing the inside of fuel

gas turbine aircraft tanks

409. Workers engaged in the preparation of bitumen and the repair of take-off

Landing strips and taxiways (sealing) at airfields

XXXV. Connection

410. Operational - maintenance

radio equipment and communication equipment on high-rise buildings

(towers, masts) over 10 m high, not equipped with elevators

XXXVI. Printing production

Works related to the use of lead alloys

411. Works on casting operations and stereotype finishing

Work performed by profession:

412. Adjuster of printing equipment employed in

sections of castings of stereotypes, font, typesetting and white space

materials

413. Caster

414. Stereotyper

Gravure printing workshops

415. Work in the printing department of intaglio printing (except

acceptance and packaging of finished products)

416. Work done by a gravure plate etcher

XXXVII. Production of musical instruments

417. Peeling and cleaning of cast iron frames of pianos and grand pianos on

abrasive wheels

418. Work performed by a manufacturer of parts for wind instruments

instruments, engaged in the manufacture of parts for brass

tools

XXXVIII. Agriculture

419. Operations in plant growing, animal husbandry,

poultry and fur farming with the use of pesticides, pesticides

and disinfectants (under the age of 35)

420. Servicing bulls - producers, stallions -

producers, boars

421. Loading and unloading animal carcasses, confiscated goods and

pathological material

422. Work in wells, slurry tanks and cisterns,

silos and hay towers

423. Work as tractor drivers - agricultural machinists

production

424. Working as truck drivers

425. Skinning from the corpses of cattle, horses and

carcass cutting

426. Transportation, loading and unloading of pesticides

427. Laying drainage tubes by hand

XXXIX. Work performed in various

sectors of the economy

428. Cleaning, scouring and painting work in ships and

railway tanks, ship fuel oil tanks and

oil tankers, cofferdams, fore and after peaks, chain

boxes, double-bottom and double-side spaces and other

hard-to-reach places

429. Painting work using white lead,

lead sulfate or other compounds containing these dyes

430. Installation, repair and maintenance of contact networks, as well as

overhead power lines when working at a height of over 10 m

431. Direct extinguishing of fires

432. Maintenance of floating facilities, dredgers with the performance

ship rigging

433. Cleaning of containers (reservoirs, measuring tanks, cisterns, barges and

etc.) from sour oil, products of its processing and

434. Works with metal mercury in open form (except

workers employed at installations and semi-automatic machines, where

ensure efficient air exchange in the workplace)

435. Composition of a mixture of gasoline with ethyl liquid

436. Cleaning mercury rectifiers

Work performed by profession:

437. Antenna - mast

438. Bitumen cooker

439. Snowmobile driver

440. Diver

441. Gas rescuer

442. Mercury dosing machine busy dosing open mercury

443. Wood splitter engaged in manual work

444. Boiler repairer of hot boilers

445. Cauldron cleaner

446. Painter engaged in the preparation of lead paints

447. Painter employed inside the containers by painting using

paints and varnishes containing lead, aromatic and

chlorinated hydrocarbons, as well as the coloring of large

products in closed chambers with a spray gun using the same

paintwork materials

448. Crane operator (crane operator) engaged in work at sea

449. The driver (fireman) of the boiler house, engaged in maintenance

steam and hot water boilers when loaded manually with a flow rate of

change of solid mineral and peat fuel to one

driver (fireman), exceeding the established norms

permissible loads for women when lifting and moving heavy loads

450. Parachutist (paratrooper - fireman)

451. Workers of the engine crew of floating cranes

452. Pitch grinder

453. Repairman of artificial structures

454. Locksmith emergency - restoration work busy at

sewerage cleaning works

455. Rigger engaged in the installation and dismantling of equipment

456. Cleaner engaged in cleaning pipes, furnaces and gas ducts

Notes. 1. The employer may decide on

employment of women in jobs (professions, positions),

included in this list, subject to the creation of safe

working conditions, confirmed by the results of certification of workers

places, with a positive conclusion of the state examination

working conditions and service of the state sanitary and epidemiological supervision of the subject of the Russian

Federation.

2. List of positions of managers, specialists and others

workers associated with underground work, where

permitted, as an exception, the use of female labor:

general manager, director, chief, technical

manager, manager, chief engineer of mines and mines at

mining of coal, ore and non-metallic minerals by underground

construction of the subway, tunnels, mine construction and

mine tunneling departments, construction and construction -

installation departments and construction and other underground structures,

their deputies and assistants; chief, chief engineer of mining

shops and sections, their deputies and assistants; senior engineer,

engineer, technician, other managers, specialists and employees, not

performing physical work; engineer, technician, laboratory assistant, others

specialists and employees who do not perform physical work and with

unstable stay underground; chief surveyor, senior

mine surveyor, mine surveyor, mines, mine surveyor; chief geologist,

chief hydrogeologist, chief hydrologist, mine and mine geologist,

geologist, mine hydrogeologist, mines, hydrogeologist, hydrologist;

workers servicing stationary mechanisms with

automatic start and stop, and do not perform other work,

associated with physical activity; employees taking the course

training and admitted to internships in the underground parts of organizations;

scientific and educational institutions,

design and design organizations;

doctor, middle and junior medical staff, bartender and

other workers engaged in sanitary and domestic services.

On the approval of the Implementation Rules state control in the field of security significant objects critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation

GOVERNMENT OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION DECISION dated February 17, 2018 No. 162 MOSCOW On approval of the Rules for exercising state control in the field of ensuring the security of significant objects of critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation In accordance with paragraph 2 of part 2 of Article 6 of the Federal Law "On the security of critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation" The Government of the Russian Federation decides: To approve the attached Rules for the implementation of state control in the field of ensuring the security of significant objects of the critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation. Chairman of the Government of the Russian Federation D. Medvedev __________________________ APPROVED by Decree of the Government of the Russian Federation of February 17, 2018 No. 162 RULES for exercising state control in the field of ensuring the security of significant objects of critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation I. General provisions 1. These Rules establish the procedure for the implementation by the federal executive body authorized in the field of ensuring the security of the critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation, and its territorial bodies(hereinafter - the state control body) measures for state control in the field of ensuring the security of significant objects of the critical information infrastructure of the Russian Federation (hereinafter, respectively - critical information infrastructure, state control). 2. State control is carried out in order to verify compliance by the subjects of critical information infrastructure, which, on the basis of ownership, lease or other legal basis belong significant objects of critical information infrastructure, the requirements established by the Federal Law "On the Security of Critical Information Infrastructure of the Russian Federation" and the regulatory legal acts adopted in accordance with it (hereinafter, respectively - security requirements, verification). 3. State control is carried out by carrying out scheduled and unscheduled field inspections. 4. To carry out the inspection, the state control body creates a commission consisting of at least 2 officials. An unscheduled inspection conducted on the grounds specified in subparagraph "a" of paragraph 20 of these Rules may be carried out by one official of the state control body. 5. An inspection is carried out by officials of the state control body, who are indicated in the order of the state control body on conducting an inspection. 6. The period for conducting a scheduled inspection should not exceed 20 working days. 7. The period for conducting an unscheduled inspection should not exceed 10 business days. 8. The term for conducting each of the checks provided for in clause 3 of these Rules in relation to a critical information infrastructure entity that operates in the territories of several constituent entities of the Russian Federation is established separately for each branch, representative office and separate structural subdivision of a critical information infrastructure entity, while the total period of the inspection may not exceed 60 working days. 9. Checks in relation to significant objects of critical information infrastructure that are owned, rented or otherwise legally owned by the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, the Foreign Intelligence Service of the Russian Federation, the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation, the Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation and the Main Directorate of Special Programs of the President of the Russian Federation, as well as significant objects of critical information infrastructure, the protection of which is within their competence, are carried out in agreement with the heads of the indicated federal executive bodies. 10. Information about the organization of inspections, including their planning, the conduct and results of such inspections, is not sent to the prosecutor's office, with the exception of information about the results of inspections conducted on the basis of the prosecutor's request to conduct an unscheduled inspection as part of supervision over the implementation of laws. according to the materials and appeals received by the prosecutor's office. II. Organizing a Scheduled Inspection 11. The subject of a scheduled inspection is the compliance by the subject of the critical information infrastructure with security requirements. 12. The grounds for the implementation of a scheduled inspection are the expiration of 3 years from the date of: a) entering information about the critical information infrastructure object in the register of significant critical information infrastructure objects; b) completion of the last scheduled inspection in respect of a significant object of critical information infrastructure. 13. The annual plan for conducting scheduled inspections is approved by the head of the state control body before December 20 of the year preceding the year in which scheduled inspections are carried out. 14. The annual plan for conducting scheduled inspections contains the following information: a) information about the subject of critical information infrastructure; b) information about the person operating a significant object of critical information infrastructure; c) end date of the last scheduled inspection; d) the month and date of the inspection; e) grounds for the inspection; f) the name of the state control body. 15. Extracts from the approved annual plan for scheduled inspections shall be sent before January 1 of the year of scheduled inspections by the state control body to subjects of critical information infrastructure. 16. The state control body shall notify the subject of the critical information infrastructure about the planned inspection at least 3 working days before the start of its conduct by sending a copy of the order of the state control body to conduct a scheduled inspection in any available way, providing the possibility of confirming the fact of such notification. 17. A scheduled inspection is carried out on the basis of an approved annual plan for conducting scheduled inspections and an order of the state control body to conduct an inspection. 18. The order of the state control body on conducting an inspection shall indicate: a) the name of the state control body, the number and date of issue of the order; b) positions, surnames, names and patronymics of officials of the state control body authorized to conduct an audit; c) information about the subject of critical information infrastructure; d) information about the person operating a significant object of critical information infrastructure; e) verification tasks; f) date of beginning and end of the check; g) the period of the inspection; h) legal grounds for conducting an audit, including regulatory legal acts, compliance with the provisions of which is subject to verification; i) a list of control measures necessary to complete the inspection tasks. III. Organization of an unscheduled inspection 19. The subject of an unscheduled inspection is the compliance by the subject of the critical information infrastructure with security requirements, the fulfillment of the order of the state control body, as well as the implementation of measures to prevent negative consequences at a significant object of the critical information infrastructure, the cause of which is the occurrence of a computer incident. 20. The grounds for conducting an unscheduled inspection are: a) the expiration of the deadline for the subject of critical information infrastructure to comply with the order issued by the state control body to eliminate the identified violation of security requirements; b) the occurrence of a computer incident at a significant object of critical information infrastructure that caused negative consequences; c) an order of a state control body issued in accordance with the instructions of the President of the Russian Federation or the Government of the Russian Federation or on the basis of the prosecutor's request to carry out an unscheduled inspection as part of the supervision of the implementation of laws based on materials and appeals received by the prosecutor's office. 21. On conducting an unscheduled inspection (with the exception of an unscheduled inspection, the basis for which is specified in subparagraph "b" of paragraph 20 of these Rules), the subject of critical information infrastructure is notified by the state control body at least 24 hours before the start of its conduct in any available way that ensures the possibility of confirming the fact of such notification. 22. If an unscheduled inspection is carried out on the grounds specified in subparagraph "b" of paragraph 20 of these Rules, the state control body has the right to start conducting an unscheduled inspection immediately. 23. An unscheduled inspection is carried out on the basis of an order of the state control body to conduct an inspection, drawn up in accordance with paragraph 18 of these Rules. IV. Inspection 24. Scheduled and unscheduled inspections are carried out at the location of the critical information infrastructure entity, the person operating the significant critical information infrastructure facility, and the significant critical information infrastructure facility. 25. The audit begins with the presentation of an official ID by officials of the state control body, the mandatory familiarization of the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him with the order of the state control body to conduct an audit. 26. To the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or authorized by him official a copy of the order of the state control body to conduct an inspection, certified by the seal of the state control body, is transferred against receipt. 27. The head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him shall be obliged to provide the officials of the state control body who carry out the inspection with the opportunity to familiarize themselves with the documents related to the subject and tasks of the inspection, and also to ensure, taking into account the requirements of the access control, unimpeded access of the officials conducting the inspection to the territory used in the course of activities of the building, structure, structure, premises and to significant objects of critical information infrastructure. 28. To assess the effectiveness of the measures taken to comply with the requirements for ensuring security, officials of the state control body use software and hardware-software controls certified for information security requirements, including those available to the subject of critical information infrastructure. The possibility and procedure for using such controls, taking into account the specifics of the functioning of a significant object of critical information infrastructure, is agreed with the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him. V. Restrictions on Conducting an Inspection 29. When conducting an inspection, officials of the state control body shall not have the right to: a) verify the fulfillment of security requirements if they do not fall within the powers of the state control body on behalf of which these officials act; b) conduct an audit if the head of the critical information infrastructure entity or an official authorized by him is absent during the audit, except for the case of an audit on the grounds specified in subparagraph "b" of paragraph 20 of these Rules; c) demand the submission of documents and information if they do not relate to the subject of verification, as well as seize the originals of such documents; d) disseminate information obtained as a result of an audit and constituting state, commercial, official and other secrets protected by law, except for cases provided for by the legislation of the Russian Federation; e) exceed the established deadlines for the inspection; f) to carry out the issuance of instructions or proposals to the subjects of critical information infrastructure on carrying out control measures at their expense; g) take action with technical means information processing, as a result of which the functioning of a significant object of critical information infrastructure may be disrupted and (or) terminated. VI. Duties of officials of the state control body during the audit 30. Officials of the state control body during the audit are obliged to: security; b) respect the rights and legitimate interests the subject of critical information infrastructure, which is being checked; c) conduct an inspection based on the order of the state control body on its conduct in accordance with its subject and tasks; d) carry out an inspection during the performance of official duties and upon presentation of service certificates and a copy of the order of the state control body on conducting an inspection; e) not prevent the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him from being present during the inspection and giving explanations on issues related to the subject of the inspection; f) provide the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him, who is present during the audit, with information and documents related to the subject of the audit; g) to acquaint the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him with the results of the audit; h) comply with the terms of the inspection established by these Rules; i) not to demand from the subject of critical information infrastructure documents and other information, the submission of which is not provided for by the legislation of the Russian Federation; j) in the case provided for by the internal regulations of the subject of critical information infrastructure, on the first day of the inspection, undergo a briefing on compliance with safety regulations when staying on the territory where the inspected significant object of critical information infrastructure is located; k) make a record of the audit in the audit register, if any. VII. The procedure for drawing up the results of the inspection 31. Based on the results of the inspection, the officials of the state control body conducting the inspection draw up an inspection report. 32. The form of the inspection report is approved by the federal executive body authorized in the field of ensuring the security of critical information infrastructure. 33. The inspection report shall indicate: a) the date and place of drawing up the inspection report; b) the name of the state control body; c) the date and number of the order of the state control body on the inspection; d) the duration and place of the inspection; e) last names, first names, patronymics and positions of the persons who conducted the inspection; f) information about the subject of critical information infrastructure; g) last name, first name and patronymic of the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him, who were present during the inspection; h) information about the person operating a significant object of critical information infrastructure; i) information about the significant object of the critical information infrastructure being checked; j) information on the results of the inspection, including the identified violations of security requirements; k) information about making an entry in the inspection register about the inspection carried out or about the impossibility of making such an entry due to the lack of a critical information infrastructure of the specified journal at the subject; l) signatures of officials of the state control body who carried out the inspection; m) information about familiarization or refusal to familiarize with the act of verification of the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him. 34. On the basis of the inspection act, in the event that a violation of security requirements is detected, the state control body issues an order to the subject of critical information infrastructure to eliminate the detected violation, indicating the period for its elimination. 35. Protocols or conclusions based on the results of control measures carried out using software and hardware-software controls, as well as instructions to eliminate identified violations and other documents related to the results of the inspection or their copies are attached to the inspection report. 36. The audit report is drawn up immediately after its completion in 3 copies, one of which with attachments is handed over to the head of the subject of critical information infrastructure or an official authorized by him. The second copy of the inspection act is sent to the federal executive body authorized in the field of ensuring the security of critical information infrastructure, the third - to the territorial body of the federal executive body authorized in the field of ensuring the security of critical information infrastructure, which conducted the check. 37. In the event of an unscheduled inspection based on the request of the prosecutor to conduct an unscheduled inspection as part of the supervision of the implementation of laws, based on the materials and appeals received by the prosecutor's office, a copy of the inspection report with copies of the annexes is sent to the relevant prosecutor's office. 38. Results of an audit containing information constituting state, commercial, official and other legally protected