Section 42: Washing facilities.

Section 42 of the Factories Act, 1948, is deceptively simple. It mandates that in every factory:

  1. Adequate and suitable facilities for washing shall be provided and maintained for the use of the workers therein.
  2. ​Separate and adequately screened facilities shall be provided for the use of male and female workers.
  3. ​Such facilities shall be conveniently accessible and shall be kept in a clean and orderly condition.

​II. Technical Deconstruction: What is “Adequate”?

​The primary criticism of Section 42 is the ambiguity of the word “adequate.” In legal sparring, ambiguity is either a tool for flexibility or a loophole for negligence.

​1. The Ratio Problem

​While the Act itself is vague, state-specific Factory Rules usually define “adequacy” based on headcount.

  • The Logic: If you have 500 workers ending a shift at 5:00 PM, and only 5 taps, the facility is not “adequate” because the “time-cost” to the worker is too high.
  • The Counterpoint: Does the law account for the nature of the work? A software assembly plant (clean) and a lead-acid battery plant (toxic) are governed by the same “washing facility” heading, yet the biological necessity for decontamination in the latter is infinitely higher.

​2. The “Suitable” Criterion

  • Enclosure: Facilities must be screened. This is a matter of dignity and privacy.
  • Maintenance: “Maintained” implies a continuous duty. An empty soap dispenser or a broken pipe is a violation of Section 42 just as much as a missing sink.

​III. Gender Segregation and the “Hidden” Architecture

​Section 42(1)(b) mandates separate facilities for men and women.

  • The Assumption: The law assumes a binary workforce. In 1948, this was the social norm. In 2026, the lack of provisions for non-binary or transgender workers in industrial legislation creates a “legal vacuum.”
  • The Design Flaw: Frequently, female washing facilities are placed in “out of the way” areas for privacy, which can inadvertently create safety risks (harassment/dark corridors). True “suitability” requires integrating security with privacy.

​IV. The Economic Sparring: Compliance vs. Cost

​Why do factories struggle with Section 42?

FactorEmployer’s PerspectiveWorker’s Perspective
Water ScarcityCost of water and effluent treatment is a “non-productive” expense.Essential for post-shift hygiene and preventing “take-home” toxins.
SpaceEvery square foot of washing area is a square foot lost for machinery.Crowded facilities lead to skin infections and poor morale.
AutomationSensor-based taps save water but have high maintenance costs.Touchless systems are more “suitable” for preventing cross-contamination.

The “Toxic” Oversight

​Section 42 is often treated as a “comfort” provision, but in chemical or heavy metal industries, it is a Safety provision.

The Argument: If a worker in a dyes and chemicals factory cannot wash their hands thoroughly due to poor Section 42 compliance, they ingest toxins during lunch.

The Counterpoint: Should Section 42 be merged with Section 14 (Dust and Fumes)? By separating “Health” and “Washing,” the law treats hygiene as an afterthought rather than a primary defense against occupational disease.

​VI. Modern Industrial Reality: Beyond the 1948 Lens

​In the 21st century, we must ask if Section 42 is enough.

  • Sustainability: Does the Act encourage water recycling? (No).
  • Ergonomics: Does it specify the height of sinks or the type of flooring to prevent slips? (Rarely).
  • Micro-biological Safety: In a post-pandemic world, “washing facilities” must include high-grade sanitization, which the 1948 Act never envisioned.

Section 42 is the bridge between Industrial Labor and Human Dignity. While the text is brief, its implementation is a battleground between operational efficiency and the biological needs of the human “component” in the manufacturing process.

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