1 / 24

Department/Unit Safety Coordinator’s Seminar Part 1

Department/Unit Safety Coordinator’s Seminar Part 1. Enterprise Risk Services/Environmental Health & Safety Tuesday, March 11, 2014. Agenda: 10:00 – 10:05 Welcome (Dan Kermoyan, EH&S) 10:05 – 10:35 Chemical Inventory and Labeling (Lance Jones, Dan Harlan, EH&S)

olivej
Télécharger la présentation

Department/Unit Safety Coordinator’s Seminar Part 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Department/Unit Safety Coordinator’s Seminar Part 1 Enterprise Risk Services/Environmental Health & Safety Tuesday, March 11, 2014

  2. Agenda: • 10:00 – 10:05 Welcome (Dan Kermoyan, EH&S) • 10:05 – 10:35 Chemical Inventory and Labeling (Lance Jones, Dan Harlan, EH&S) • 10:35 – 10:50 Laboratory Safety Assessments Overview (Dan Kermoyan, EH&S) • 10:50 – 11:05 PI Assistant resource software (Dan Harlan, EH&S) • 11:05 – 11:10 Q & A • ** 10-Minute Break ** • 11:20 – 11:30 Lab Resources Binder (Andy Kenst, EH&S) • 11:30 – 11:45 Laboratory Chemical Hygiene Plan (Andy Kenst, Lance Jones, EH&S) • 11:45 – 11:55 Waste minimization/Chemical ReUse program (Kent Lanning, EH&S) • 11:55 – 12:00 Q & A; Future topics?

  3. Chemical Inventory and Labeling Lance Jones, Dan Harlan, EH&S

  4. Chemical Inventory Specifics • Used as the basis of several reports • Homeland security, CRTK (SFM), local FD • On-line with ONID access • Enter all chemicals • Size and # of containers • Drop-down search boxes • Can share list within department

  5. Labels

  6. NO!

  7. Chemical Container Labels • All containers need labels • Contents • Plain English chemical name • Hazard information • HMIS or NFPA

  8. Hazard Information • HMIS format • NFPA format

  9. Pre-Printed Labels • Reports available online • Standard formats (Avery) • Label Printer (Zebra) • Barcode = Inventory #

  10. Waste Labels

  11. Waste Storage • Lids secured • Secondary containment

  12. Laboratory Safety Assessments Overview Dan Kermoyan, EH&S

  13. Laboratory Safety Assessments Drivers Benefits Regulatory visits increasing Recent events Granting Agencies Accreditation Our observations Faculty needs help Compliance and lower fines Reduce injuries and damages Increase Research $$ Favorable exposure Decrease chemical and disposal costs EH&S as a resource

  14. How do we get there……..?Lab Categories (LCAT) • Laboratory categories grouped by materials used/stored. • 1,618 spaces. • Assigned an assessment frequency.

  15. Lab Categories 1 and 2 LCAT 1, (36 month assessment) • Teaching labs with small quantities (<5 gallons, 5 lbs., or 50 ft3) of hazardous substances • Autoclave rooms • Dishwashing rooms • Freezer rooms • Equipment rooms LCAT 2, (24 month assessment) • Teaching labs with large quantities (>5 gallons, 5 lbs., or 50 ft3) of hazardous substances • Research labs with small quantities (<5 gallons, 5 lbs.) of solvents, acids/bases, chemicals • BSL-1, ABSL-1 labs • Tissue culture • Vivariums • Nonhazardous compressed gas storage <500 ft3 • Laser class 3R or lower • Machine shops, Fabrication labs • Electronic labs, Analytical labs • UV germicidal lamps, trans- illuminators, cross linkers, hand-held units • Cryogenics

  16. Lab Categories 3 and 4 LCAT 3, (18 month assessment) • Research labs with large quantities (>5 gallons, 5 lbs.) of solvents, acids/bases, chemicals • OSHA regulated carcinogens • BSL-2, ABSL-2 labs, rDNA, or Blood borne pathogens, human source tissues or cell lines • Small quantity of toxic gas or flammable gas (<lecture size bottle) • Nonhazardous compressed gas storage >500 ft3 • Anesthetic gases • Laser class 3B or 4 • MRI/NMR suites, Magnetic fields • Controlled substances LCAT 4, (12 month assessment) • BSL-3, ABSL-3 labs • Select agent labs • Toxins of biological origin • Chemical of Interest (COI) labs • Nano-materials • Toxic, Flammable, or Pyrophoric gases • Toxic Chemicals • RUA lab • X-Ray lab • Sealed sources, LSC

  17. Lab Safety Assessment Process • 1-month advanced notice to Department chairs and safety coordinators. • Use Lab Safety Assessment checklist • Common areas to focus on before EHS visit: • Chemical inventory • Label and secure chemicals • Training • Lab Chemical Hygiene Plan

  18. Lab Safety Assessment Process • Lab Visit appointment with PI or Supervisor. • Nature of the Assessment? • Resource oriented. • 2-way dialogue; feedback useful. • Lab Assessment Checklist: http://oregonstate.edu/ehs/ • Will receive Assessment report via email.

  19. Lab Assessment: Actions Needed Follow-up Times • Routine Items – Routine lab safety items. • 7 or 30 days • No revisit by EH&S • Special Conditions – Special hazard exists. • Less than 7 days • Revisit by EH&S • Immediate Correction Needed – Imminent hazard exists. • Immediate correction • Revisit by EH&S

  20. Actions Needed: Special Condition

  21. Actions Needed: Immediate Correction

  22. Lab Safety Assessment Process Completion • PI or Supervisor responds via email on items completed. • EHS updates the LCAT category and next visit date. • Laboratory is ready for compliance sign-off. • Similar approach to Biosafety, Shop, Radiation, Other. • Alternative system for PI or supervisor to respond…..

More Related