Title: Awareness Overview
1Awareness Overview
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2Where Are We?
- Introduction
- Awareness of Hazardous Materials
- Detecting Hazardous Materials
- Identification and Hazard Assessment
- Conclusion
2-2
3Hazardous Materials(Dangerous Goods)
- Any substance that poses an unreasonable risk
to life, the environment, or property when not
properly contained
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4Identifying the Problem
- Increasing number of incidents
- Increasing hazardous materials legislation
Number of incidents reported annually in U.S.
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5Identifying the Problem
- Resolution is the responsibility of many agencies
- Past training stresses taking immediate action
while minimizing the importance of personal safety
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6Basic Safety Guidelines Risk Reduction Through
Training
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7Basic Safety Guidelines Safety entails basic
common sense
- Protect yourself from injury!
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8Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously from upwind
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9Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously
- Secure the scene
2-9
10Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously
- Secure the scene
- Identify the hazards
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11Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously
- Secure the scene
- Identify the hazards
- Assess the situation
2-11
12Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously
- Secure the scene
- Identify the hazards
- Assess the situation
- Obtain help
2-12
13Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously
- Secure the scene
- Identify the hazards
- Assess the situation
- Obtain help
- Decide on site entry
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14Basic Safety Guidelines Department of
Transportation
- When approaching incident
- Approach cautiously
- Secure the scene
- Identify the hazards
- Assess the situation
- Obtain help
- Decide on site entry
- Respond
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15Above all
- Do not walk into or touch spilled material
- Do not inhale fumes, smoke, or vapors, even if no
dangerous goods are known to be involved - Do not assume gases or vapors are harmless
because of a lack of a smell...odorless gases or
vapors may be harmful - Use caution when handling empty containers
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16Why there are no HazMat experts
- The scope of knowledge required is too broad !
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17HazMat Response Associated Disciplines
- Industrial hygiene
- Mechanical engineering
- Toxicology
- Biological science
- Environmental protection
- Physics
- Radiation science
- Chemistry
- Fire safety
- Waste management
- Chemical engineering
2-17
18New and Changing Knowledge
- The field of hazardous materials incident
management is dynamic. - Hazardous Materials Incident Management is
constantly changing - New chemicals are synthesized each day
- Old chemicals are used in new and different ways
2-18
19New Knowledge Becomes Obsolete Quickly
- Much data is outdated before it is released in
printed form. - Keeping current is an absolutely vital task of
the dedicated professional. - There are few fields of professional endeavor
that require more thorough study of changing
problems, techniques, and technologies.
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20No one is a walking encyclopedia
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21Purpose of Intervention
- To change the sequence of natural events in order
to - minimize the harm that would naturally occur
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22To Reduce Harm to Exposures
- Predict the natural outcome
Stabilization will occur naturally
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23To Reduce Harm to Exposures conduct risk/benefit
analysis
Risk
Benefit
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24Risk vs. Benefit
- The benefit achieved
- (reducing naturally occurring harm)
-
- should exceed the risk
- (harm attributed to intervention)
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25What are the outcomes of natural stabilization?
Can I favorably change the outcome of natural
stabilization by my intervention?
Do nothing exceptprotect exposures
No
Yes
Do nothing exceptprotect exposures
Does the benefit of intervention exceed the risk
involved?
No
Yes
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26 Establishing Response Guidelines and Priorities
- Designing procedures
- for all situations
- is not practical
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27Basic Priorities Life Comes First
- Life
- Environment
- Property / equipment
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28Priority 1 Life Safety
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29Priority 2 Protecting the Environment
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30Priority 3 Protecting Property / Equipment
2-30
31What does it all mean?
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32Scene 1
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33Scene 2
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34Regulatory Mandates for Training
- 29 CFR 1910.120
- Code of Federal Regulations
- OAR 437-02-100
- Oregon Administrative Rules
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35Levels of Emergency ResponseOSHA Levels
- OnScene Incident Commander
- Hazardous Materials Specialist
- Hazardous Materials Technician
- First Responder (Operations Level)
- First Responder (Awareness Level)
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36OSHA First Responder Awareness
- Recognizes a hazardous material release
- Notifies proper authorities
- Takes no further action
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37OSHA First Responder Operations
- Responds to release
- Protects exposures
- Acts in a defensive mode
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38OSHA First Responder Operations
- Function
- To contain the release from a safe distance
- To keep it from spreading
- To prevent exposures
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39OSHA Hazardous Materials Technician
- Responds offensively to stop release
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40OSHA Hazardous Materials Specialist
- Responds with and supports HazMat Technicians
- Duties require specialized expertise
- Acts as site liaison
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41OSHA On-Scene Incident Commander
- Assumes control of the incident scene beyond the
First Responder Awareness level
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42Requirements for Local Emergency Response
Planning
- 1. Pre-emergency planning and coordination with
outside parties - 2. Personnel roles, lines of authority, training
and communication
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43Requirements for Local Emergency Response
Planning
- 1. Pre-emergency planning and coordination with
outside parties - 2. Personnel roles, lines of authority, training
and communication - 3. Emergency recognition and prevention
- 4. Safe distances and places of refuge
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44Requirements for Local Emergency Response
Planning
- 1. Pre-emergency planning and coordination with
outside parties - 2. Personnel roles, lines of authority, training
and communication - 3. Emergency recognition and prevention
- 4. Safe distances and places of refuge
- 5. Site security and control
- 6. Evacuation routes and procedures
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45Requirements for Local Emergency Response
Planning
- 7. Decontamination
- 8. Emergency medical treatment and first aid
- 9. Emergency alerting and response procedures
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46Requirements for Local Emergency Response
Planning
- 7. Decontamination
- 8. Emergency medical treatment and first aid
- 9. Emergency alerting and response procedures
- 10. Critique of response and followup
- 11. Personal protective clothing and emergency
equipment
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47Local Emergency Plan
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48Local Emergency Plan
- Has your organization developed its own local
emergency response plan? - or
- Has your organization adopted a plan that was
already in existence?
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49Standard Operating Procedures
- Develop federally mandated plan elements into
SOPs - SOPs allow all personnel to understand the
operational concepts being used - SOPs can become part of the Local Emergency
Response Plan by being used to meet specific plan
elements
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50Standard Operating Procedures (S.O.P.)
- Has your organization developed SOPs?
- or
- Has your organization adopted another
organization's SOPs?
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51Review
- Definition of hazardous materials
- Identifying the hazardous materials problem
- Basic safety guidelines
- Why there are no HazMat experts
- Purpose of intervention
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52Review
- Establishing response guidelines and priorities
- Legislative mandates for training
- OSHA levels of emergency response training
- Requirements for local emergency response planning
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53Summary
safety
at all times!!
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