HomeMy WebLinkAbout78-040REL: nr
6-1-76
RESOLUTION NO. 7840
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE
CITY OF SANTA ANA FINDING THE NECESSITY
OF CHANGES AND MODIFICATIONS IN THE RE-
QUIREMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ELECTRICAL
CODE, 1975 EDITION, AS ADOPTED BY THE
COMMISSION OF HOUSING AND COMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT
WHEREAS, under Sections 17958, 17958.5 and 19758.7
of the Health and Safety Code of the State of California the
governing bodies of cities are authorized to adopt ordinances
and regulations changing or modifying the requirements of the
regulations of the Commission of Housing and Community Develop-
ment, upon an express finding that such changes or modifications
are needed; and
WHEREAS, the Contmission of Housing and Community
Development has, within one year previous hereto, adopted the
National Electrical Code, 1975 Edition, as part of its regula-
tion of buildings used for human habitation, and
WHEREAS, the City Council of the City of Santa Ana
desires to adopt Ordinance No. NS-1416, which adopts and amends
the said National Electrical Code, 1975 Edition, so as to make
changes or modifications in the requirements of said regulations
of the Commission of Housing and Community Development, and
desires hereby to expressly find and declare the need for such
changes and modifications,
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the City Council
of the City of Santa Aha does hereby find and declare that amend-
ments to the following sections of the National Electrical Code,
1975 Edition, as specified in Ordinance No. NS-1416, are neces-
sary because of local conditions for the reasons hereinafter set
forth:
1. The amendments to Section 90-1(a) and 90-2(a)
are necessary for purposes of clarity.
2. Amendments to Section 110-5: Since 1965, re-
ported and documented failures of aluminum conductors (_sizes
12 AWG, 10 AWG and 8 AWG) at the devices, have necessitated their
discontinued use until further determination by Federal Consumer
Safety Commission that they are now safe with the new material
and devices recently introduced by the manufacturers.
3. Amendment to Section 210-1: It is felt neces-
sary to require conductors to be placed underground due to the
incidence of accidental contact by metal ladders~ pipe, kites,
swimming pool scoops and brushes, cranes and other sit, ilar items,
Overhead conductors are also subject to being disconnected as
a result of wind storms. If raceways are not provided when spare
circuits are provided for, a hazard is usually created when
owners or tenants add additional wiring. In any case, slipshod
wiring, usually surface, is done creating an additional hazard.
There is no requirement for spare circuits but if they are
provided it is felt to be important that a raceway be installed
to utilize the circuits without damaging parts of the permanent
structure.
RESOLUTION NO. 75.-40
PAGE TWO
4. A~endment to Section 210-19(c): Many appliances
now take a full 1650 watts in use - with larger ones coming
out more and more frequently. A 20 amp receptacle circuit to-
day barely provides adequate, reliable service and safety to
the user. This has been a standard here and elsewhere for over
30 years. A 15 amp circuit could not handle electric plug-in
fireplaces, large televisions, window air conditioners, ironers
and numerous other cord-connected appliances.
5. Amendment to Section 210-25(b): The word "attached"
has been deleted and the word "carports" has been added in order
to provide the same degree of convenience and safety to detached
garages and carports as the Code requires for attached garages.
6. Amendment to Section 210-26(a): The word "carports"
has been added in order to provide lighting for safe use in that
location also.
7. Amendment to Article 215: Since the greatest fault
current will occur either in the service conduit, service section,
feeder conduit and sub-panels, it is felt that these major parts
should be enclosed to prevent fire being immediately transferred
to the structure. At present, only the feeder run is allowed to
be installed out of a raceway or unprotected.
8. Amendment to Section 220-3: This important amend-
ment provides reliability and safety in electrical systems. It
also assures that at least two circuits will be in every habitable
room. Nuisance blinking and dimming of lights due to use of
appliances is prevented. This amendment provides reasonable
assurance that new portable appliances will operate properly and
safely when connected, and that a fault in an appliance will not
interrupt another circuit, possibly causing a hazard.
9. Amendment to Section 230-43: Utility company con-
ductors can deliver tremendous amounts of current when faulted
due to mechanical injury, etc. This current is immediately trans-
ferred to the structure, causing fire or explosion. This amend-
ment would provide for reasonable protection of the structure
and would contain most such faults within the raceway.
10. Amendment to Section 230-71: In the absence of
this amendment the Code would allow up to six main disconnects
for any one occupancy or service, thus allowing connect±on of
additional circuits to a service without any protection to panel
buses from overloading, with the inevitable fire. A single main
disconnect, as required by this amendment, provides the necessary
safety to the electrical system~ and in addition allows fast
disconnection in time of emergency.
11. Amendment to Section 250~831 The reason for
this amendment is that alternate electrodes to tko~e 5asically
provided for in the National Electric Code do not provide ade~
quate grounding means in the soil condition~ that ~e e~perienee
in Orange County. The ufer ground or the concrete cased eiec~
trode has gained wide acceptance by the industry and it is felt
that this is a more preferable way to provide grounding electrode
than any others provided for in the Code, especially with the
advent of plastic water services.
12. Amendment to Section 250~1151 The connection
of the electrical service to the grounding electrode of the struc-
ture, is one of the most i~portant safety terminations in the '
RESOLUTION NO. 78-40
PAGE THREE
electrical system. It must be determined that this has been
completed at final inspection and periodically throughout the
life of the system to check for mechanical damage or corrosion
from electrolysis, etc.
13. Amendment to Section 300-13(b~: The Code allows
15 ampere receptacles, etc., on 20 ampere circuits. The recep-
tacles have, in the past, been used to splice the circuits to-
gether at each location. This is in violation of their "list-
ing.'' Some burn-out has been traced to this practice. Now, the
only current going through each receptacle will be what is
plugged into that individual receptacle and not from others on
that same circuit.
14. Amendment to Section 300-15~): Exception 1 is
deleted because use of exposed cable is deleted by the amend-
ment to Section 336-3. Exception 5 is deleted for the following
reasons: This wiring method was developed for mobile homes and
other controlled modular structure systems, does not lend
self to on-site construction methods. Numerous special tools,
boxes, splicing kits, etc. must be used to install, repair or
alter this system. Home owners would, and now cannot, obtain
these items. An untrained person oould not work on this system,
and thousands of unsafe electrical jobs would be completed by
owners and other untrained persons. Until this system has had
nationwide publicity and the average person has ready access to
all its special requirements for a safe installation, it must
not be "thrown" on the market.
15. Amendment to Article 334: Metal Clad Cable,
commonly known as BX, has not been used, except by an occasional
homeowner, for years in this area. It never gained any popu-
larity as a wiring method due to the difficulty of properly in-
stalling it free from shorts and grounds. The proper connectors,
boxes and short insulating inserts are not readily obtainable
any longer even to electrical contractors. This wiring material
should have been deleted as an "approved" wiring method years
ago.
16. Amendment to Section 336-3: Due to the occupant
load and lesser degree of safety that is provided by use of
non~metallic sheathed cable, this amendment limits its use to
residential structures of three floors or less above grade.
A few of the dangers justifying this restriction are as follows:
La) penetration of cables unknowingly by nails
after completion of the structure;
(b) mechanical damage to cables by workmen during
construction;
(c) safety hazards created by persons attempting to
add new wiring;
~d) transference of a fault in the cable immediately
to the structure; and
(e) liklihood of mechanical damage during fire or
earthquake, with consequent lack of protection for emergency
power to elevators and exit lights.
17. Amendment to Section 336~6. Non-metallic sheathed
cable is very easily damaged mechanically, and, when damaged, it
becomes an immediate fire or life hazard. The exposed installa-
tion of such cable, which this amendment prohibits, increases the
chances of mechanical damage tremendously.
RESOLUTION NO. 78-40
PAGE FOUR
18. Amendment to Section 336-11: This amendment is a
corollary to the amendments of Sections 300-15(b) and 336t6, pre-
cluding the use of "boxless systems" and devices for exposed
cable installations.
19. Amendment to Section 348-1: The purpose of pro-
hibiting the use of electrical metal tubing in concrete or under-
ground is due to the following items: (1) corrosive soil preva-
lent to the Orange County area; ~2) vibration by mechanical devices
used during the pouring of concrete; ~3) sodium chloride additives
and their corrosive effect; and (4) mechanical damage by workmen
and equipment during the construction process. In the past elec-
trical metallic tubing has been restricted to protected interior
location because of corrosion of the tubing. Recently, due to
practical experience of Code enforcement authorities, it has been
determined that such tubing will perform safely where it is not
directly exposed to the weather. (Cities closer to the ocean still
accept such tubing only on the interior of a structure.)
20. Amendment to Section 350~2: The reason that flexible
metal conduit should be prohibited in concrete or exposed to water
is obvious. The flexible conduit is not impervious to moisture
and would allow moisture to enter the raceway system creating a
hazard. In addition, if it is poured in concrete, aggregate could
work its way into the conduit and would knick and cut insulation
during the pulling process. In the past few years aluminum flexible
conduit has gained wide popularity due to its light weight. But
it also is easily damaged and subject to a greater degree of corro-
sion than the galvanized steel type. This amendment would allow
only that length of flexible conduit which is necessary for main-
tenance of equipment, movement, or vibration, and would not allow
it to be used as an exposed, unlimited surface raceway system.
21. Amendment to Section 410-8: This amendment prohi-
bits pull-chain lighting in clothes closets because the repair of
pull-chain fixtures is difficult and impractical. When the switch-
ing mechanism fails, either the fixture is abandoned or the lamp
is screwed on and off by hand, creating a hazard. Furthermore, a
person would frequently be required to enter the closet and locate
the pull switch in the dark, subjecting himself to possible injury.
22. Amendment to Section 422-5: The purpose of this
amendment is to provide adequate circuit capacity for the larger
fixed appliances. The minimum 20 ampere circuit assures reliable
and safe operation of the appliance without affecting other cir-
cuits. In addition, it would allow replacement of one appliance
with another requiring more current without costly rewiring of the
circuit. The food waste grinder has become a necessary appliance
for sanitary reasons, and if a circuit is not provided for it at
the sink location initially, unsafe wiring is likely to be installed
at a later date.
23. Amendment to Section 600-1: If future access to
an electrical panel is not provided for in the installation of
the sign circuit, unsafe wiring is usually found due to building
design or sign location. In tke past unsafe wiring has been
kept to a minimum by an empty conduit run to the roof or by other
means provided for the sign circuit.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that upon adoption of this reso-
lution and Ordinance No. NS~416, the Clerk of the Council shall
forward a copy of this resolution, together with a copy of the
said ordinance to the Department of Housing and Community Develop-
ment of the State of California for filing therewith.
RESOLUTION NO. ?8-40
PAGE FIVE
PASSED AND ADOPTED by the City Council of the City of
Santa Ana at its Regular meeting held on the 27~th
day of 3uno , 197~.
ATTEST:
MAYOR
FLORENCE I. J~AALONE
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF ORANGE ) sS
CITY OF SANTA ANA )
I, FLORENCE I. MALONE, do hereby certify that I am the
Clerk of the Council of the City of Santa Ana; that the fore-
going Resolution was introduced to said Council at its
Re§ular meeting held on the 27th day of June ~ ,
1976, and was at said meeting passed and adopted by the following
vote, to wit:
AYES, COUNCILMEN: Garthe, Brandt, 0rtiz, Yamamoto,
Ward
NOES,
COUNCILMEN: Bricken
ABSENTr
COUNCILMEN: Evans
FLORENCE I. MALONE
CLERK OF-','~l.~ coUNCIL
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
CITY ATTORNEY