Title 5 BUSINESS TAXES, LICENSES AND REGULATIONS
Chapter 5.50 BODY ART
5.50.040 General provisions.
A. Smoking, eating or drinking by anyone is prohibited in the
area where body art is performed.
B. Operators must be a minimum of eighteen years of
age.
C. Operators shall refuse service to any person who, in the
opinion of a reasonable objective observer, is under the influence of alcohol or
drugs.
D. The operator shall maintain a high degree of personal
cleanliness, conform to hygienic practices and wear clean clothes when
performing body art procedures. Before performing body art procedures, the
operator must thoroughly wash his or her hands in hot running water with liquid
antimicrobial soap, then rinse his or her hands and dry with disposable paper
towels. This shall be done as often as necessary to remove
contaminants.
E. In performing body art procedures, the operator shall wear
disposable medical gloves. The gloves shall be discarded at a minimum, after the
completion of each procedure on an individual client.
F. If, while performing a body art procedure, the
operator’s glove is pierced, torn or otherwise contaminated, the procedure
in subsections D and E of this section shall be repeated immediately. The
contaminated gloves shall be immediately discarded and the hands washed
thoroughly as described in subsection D of this section before a fresh pair of
gloves are used. Any item or other instrument used for body art which is
contaminated during the procedure shall be discarded and replaced immediately
with new ones before the procedure resumes.
G. Contaminated waste, as defined in this code, which may
release liquid blood or body fluids when compressed or may release dried blood
or body fluids when handled must be placed in an approved “red” bag
and which is marked with the international “biohazard” symbol. It
must then be disposed of by a waste hauler approved by the department or, at a
minimum, pursuant to the requirements of 29 CFR Part 1910.1030. Sharps ready for
disposal shall be disposed of in approved sharps containers. Contaminated waste
which does not release liquid blood or body fluids when compressed or does not
release dried blood or body fluids when handled may be placed in a covered
receptacle and disposed of through normal, approved disposal methods. Storage of
contaminated waste on-site shall not exceed the period specified by the
department or more than a maximum of thirty days, as specified in 29 CFR Part
1910.1030 whichever is stricter.
H. No person shall perform any body art procedure upon a
person under the age of eighteen years without the presence, consent and proper
identification of a parent or legal guardian unless under the direct supervision
of a physician. Nothing in this section is intended to require an operator to
perform any body art procedure on a person under eighteen years of age with
parental or guardian consent.
I. Any skin or mucosa surface to receive a body art procedure
shall be free of rash, infection or any other visible pathological
condition.
J. The skin of the operator shall be free of rash, infection
or any other visible pathological condition. No person or operator affected with
boils, infected wounds, open sores, abrasions, exudative lesions, acute
respiratory infection, nausea, vomiting or diarrhea shall work in any area of a
body art establishment in any capacity in which there is a likelihood of
contaminating body art equipment, supplies or working surfaces with pathogenic
organisms.
K. Proof shall be provided upon request of the department
that all operators have either completed or were offered and declined, in
writing, the hepatitis B vaccination series; that antibody testing has revealed
that the employee is immune to hepatitis B; or that the vaccine is
contraindicated for medical reasons. Contraindication requires a dated and
signed physician’s statement specifying the name of the employee and that
the vaccine cannot be given. (Ord. 1708-2002 § 2(part), 2002).
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