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Ensure safety and health compliance with HAZWOPER guidelines. Learn about PPE, safe work practices, and emergency response plans to protect on-site personnel.
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Personnel responsible for safety/health • Review the names of personnel and alternates responsible for safety and health • May vary according to job responsibilities 1a
Safety and health hazards • Potential exposures to chemical hazards • Biological and radiological hazards • Principles of toxicology • General safety hazards 2a
PPE - program elements • Equipment selection and use • Maintenance and storage • Decontamination and disposal 3a
PPE - program elements • Training and proper fit • Donning and doffing procedures • Inspection 3b
PPE - program elements • In-use monitoring • Program evaluation • Equipment limitations 3c
Personal protective equipment • Employers must provide and require the use of PPE where engineering controls are not feasible 3d
Personal protective equipment • PPE must be appropriate to the: • requirements/limitations of the site • task-specific conditions and duration • identified hazards and potential hazards 3e
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • Examples of safe work practices include removing all non-essential personnel from potential exposure while: • opening drums • wetting down dusty operations • placing employees upwind of potential hazards 4a
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • The standard covers two specific work practices: • Handling and Labeling Drums and Containers 1910.120(j) • Sanitation of Temporary Workplaces 1910.120(n) 4b
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • Ensure that drums meet required regulations • Inform employees of appropriate hazard warnings of labeled drums 4c
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • Ensure that safe practices are instituted when handling and labeling drums and containers 4d
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • Standing on or working from drums or containers is prohibited • Evacuate non-essential employees from the transfer area when handling and labeling drums and containers 4e
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • Use barriers to protect equipment operators from the transfer area when handling and labeling drums and containers • Make available a continuous means of communication when handling and labeling drums and containers 4f
Work practices to minimize risk from hazards • Safe removal of bulging drums or containers • Sanitation of temporary workplaces • Privies • Chemical toilets • Recirculation toilets • Combustion toilets 4g
Engineering controls and equipment • Engineering controls and work practices must be implemented to help reduce and maintain employee exposure at or below permissible exposure limits • If engineering and work practice controls are not feasible, use appropriate PPE 5a
Medical surveillance • Medical surveillance helps assess and monitor the health and fitness of employees working with hazardous substances 6a
Establish a medical surveillance program when: • Employees are exposed to hazardous substances above the PEL for more than 30 days/year 6b
Establish a medical surveillance program when: • Employees are exposed above the published exposure levels for 30 days or more/year 6c
Establish a medical surveillance program when: • Workers who wear approved respirators for 30 or more days/year on site 6d
Establish a medical surveillance program when: • Workers are exposed to unexpected or emergency releases of hazardous wastes above exposure limits 6e
Establish a medical surveillance program when: • Employees are members of HAZMAT teams 6f
Medical surveillance • Examinations are performed under the supervision of a licensed physician without cost to the employee, and in a reasonable time and place 6g
Medical surveillance - examinations • Prior to job assignment and annually thereafter • At the termination of employment • Before reassignment to an area where medical examinations are not required 6h
Medical surveillance - examinations • If the examining physician believes that a periodic follow-up is medically necessary • As soon as possible for employees injured or becoming ill from exposure during an emergency 6i
Elements of site-specific safety and health plans • Decontamination procedures • Handling contaminated clothing • Showers and change rooms 7a
Emergency response plans • Review 29 CFR 1910.38 • Review 29 CFR 1910.120(l) 8a
Emergency response plans - required elements • Personnel roles, lines of authority, communications procedures • Pre-emergency planning • Emergency recognition and prevention 8b
Emergency response plans - required elements • Emergency medical and first aid treatment • Methods or procedures for alerting onsite employees • Safe distances and places of refuge 8c
Emergency response plans - required elements • Site security and control • Decontamination procedures • Critique of response and follow-up 8d
Emergency response plans - required elements • PPE and emergency equipment • Evacuation routes/procedures 8e
Confined space entry • Review 29 CFR 1910.146 9a
Spill containment programs • Review 29 CFR 1910.38 10a
Spill containment programs - checklist • Is the plan in writing? • Is the written plan accessible to employees? • Are emergency escape procedures and emergency escape routes assigned? 10b
Spill containment programs - checklist • Are procedures established to account for all employees after the emergency evacuation has been completed? • Has an employee alarm system been developed? 10c
Spill containment programs - checklist • Have enough employees been trained in evacuation? • Has the emergency action plan been reviewed? 10d
Spill containment programs - checklist • Is the written plan kept at the workplace and made available to employees? • Will employees be handling incidental releases? 10e
Spill containment programs • Decontamination equipment • Drop cloths or plastics • Collection containers • Absorbents, foams, chemical containment materials • Long-handled wash brushes, paper cloth towels • Appropriate PPE and books 10f