HAZWOPER and Clandestine Labs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

HAZWOPER and Clandestine Labs

Description:

HAZWOPER and Clandestine Labs Dave Appel IDEM Health & Safety Director Bloodborne Pathogens BBP Standard addresses: PPE, Work Practices & Engineering Controls ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:331
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 37
Provided by: myshareI
Learn more at: https://www.in.gov
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: HAZWOPER and Clandestine Labs


1
HAZWOPER and Clandestine Labs
  • Dave Appel IDEM Health Safety Director

2
HAZWOPER
  • Hazardous waste operations and emergency response
    standards (29 CFR 1910.120) apply to the
    following situations
  • Clean-up operations required by a governmental
    body at uncontrolled hazardous waste sites
  • Voluntary clean-up operations at uncontrolled
    hazardous waste sites
  • Operations involving hazardous waste that are
    conducted at treatment, storage, disposal (TSD)
    facilities
  • Emergency response operations

3
HAZWOPER Clan Labs
  • How does this apply?
  • Uncontrolled hazardous waste site means an area
    identified as an uncontrolled hazardous waste
    site by a governmental body where an accumulation
    of hazardous substances creates a threat to the
    health and safety of individuals or the
    environment or both.

4
HAZWOPER
  • What is required?
  • Site Specific Health Safety Plan
  • Site Characterization
  • Training
  • Medical Surveillance
  • Engineering controls, work practices and personal
    protective equipment
  • Air Monitoring
  • Drums and container handling
  • Decontamination

5
HAZWOPER
  • 29 CFR 1910.120(e) Training Required
  • All employees working on site (such as but not
    limited to equipment operators, general laborers
    and others) exposed to hazardous substances,
    health hazards, or safety hazards and their
    supervisors and management responsible for the
    site shall receive training before they are
    permitted to engage in hazardous waste operations
    that could expose them to hazardous substances,
    safety, or health hazards.
  • Employees shall not be permitted to participate
    in or supervise field activities until they have
    been trained to a level required by their job
    function and responsibility

6
Hazwoper Training
  • Elements to be covered
  • Names of personnel and alternates responsible for
    site safety and health
  • Safety, health and other hazards present
  • Use of PPE
  • Work practices by which the employee can minimize
    risks from hazards
  • Safe use of engineering controls and equipment
  • Medical surveillance requirements including
    recognition of symptoms and signs which might
    indicate over exposure to hazards

7
  • Initial training
  • General site workers (such as equipment
    operators, general laborers and supervisory
    personnel) engaged in hazardous substance removal
    or other activities which expose or potentially
    expose workers to hazardous substances and health
    hazards shall receive a minimum of 40 hours of
    instruction off the site, and a minimum of three
    days actual field experience under the direct
    supervision of a trained experienced supervisor

8
HAZWOPER Training
  • Workers on site only occasionally for a specific
    limited task (such as, but not limited to, ground
    water monitoring, land surveying, or geophysical
    surveying) and who are unlikely to be exposed
    over permissible exposure limits and published
    exposure limits shall receive a minimum of 24
    hours of instruction off the site, and the
    minimum of one day actual field experience under
    the direct supervision of a trained, experienced
    supervisor.
  • Workers with 24 hours of training who become
    general site workers or who are required to wear
    respirators, shall have the additional 16 hours
    and two days of training necessary to total the
    40 hours of training.

9
Management and supervisor training
  • On-site management and supervisors directly
    responsible for or who supervise employees
    engaged in hazardous waste operations
  • 40 hours initial and three days of supervised
    field experience (the training may be reduced to
    24 hours and one day if the only area of their
    responsibility is employees requiring only 24
    hours of training) and at least eight additional
    hours of specialized training at the time of job
    assignment
  • Such topics may be, the employer's safety and
    health program, personal protective equipment
    program, spill containment program, and health
    hazard monitoring procedure and techniques.

10
Refresher Training
  • Employees, managers and supervisors that have
    completed the 40 hour or 24 hour training shall
    receive eight hours of refresher training
    annually
  • Any critique of incidents that have occurred in
    the past year that can serve as training examples
    of related work, and other relevant topics.

11
(No Transcript)
12
Site Specific Health and Safety Plan (HASP)
  • Addresses hazards associated with any site work
    to be conducted
  • Identifies work practices, equipment, PPE,
    emergency procedures, etc.
  • Requires site research
  • Must be adjusted based upon site conditions-not a
    static document
  • May be generated from a template but with site
    specific information

13
Site Characterization
  • A preliminary evaluation of a site's
    characteristics shall be performed prior to site
    entry by a qualified person in order to aid in
    the selection of appropriate employee protection
    methods prior to site entry.
  • Immediately after initial site entry, a more
    detailed evaluation of the site's specific
    characteristics shall be performed in order to
    further identify existing site hazards and to
    further aid in the selection of the appropriate
    engineering controls and personal protective
    equipment for the tasks to be performed.
  • Assessment will be based upon the work to be
    performed or anticipated

14
Medical Surveillance
  • All employees who are or may be exposed to
    hazardous substances or health hazards at or
    above the established permissible exposure limit,
    above the published exposure levels for these
    substances, without regard to the use of
    respirators, for 30 days or more a year
  • All employees required to wear a respirator gt30
    days per year
  • Any employee that develops signs or symptoms of
    an exposure

15
Personal Protective Equipment
  • PPE must selected based upon the types of hazards
    suspected or encountered
  • PPE must be designated for each task
  • Employees must be trained on all aspects of the
    PPE

16
  • Chemical PPE Selection Guidebook

17
Respiratory Protection
  • Written program is required
  • Respirator and cartridge selection must be based
    on the hazards known or anticipated
  • All employees must be medically approved prior to
    use
  • All employees must be fit tested on the exact
    make, model, and size of respirator that they
    will be using
  • All employees must be trained

18
Respiratory Protection
19
Respiratory Protection
20
Respiratory Protection
  • Voluntary use of respirators
  • Sometimes, workers may wear respirators to avoid
    exposures to hazards, even if the amount of
    hazardous substance does not exceed the limits
    set by OSHA standards.
  • No medical surveillance or fit testing is
    required
  • NIOSH Approved respirators should be used

21
Air Monitoring
  • Air monitoring is essential for initial site
    characterization
  • No one instrument can do it all
  • Photionization Detector (PID)
  • Measures volatile organic compounds
  • Ultraviolet light use for ionization source
  • Not chemical specific
  • Ionization potential critical for instrument use
  • Good suitability for Clan Lab investigations

22
Air Monitoring
  • Flame Ionization Detector (FID)
  • Uses a hydrogen flame as ionization source
  • Ionization potential irrelevant
  • Cannot be used in temperatures lt40 degree F
  • Expensive and difficult to use
  • Good suitability for Clan Lab investigations

23
Air Monitoring
  • Direct reading tubes
  • Measure concentration of specific contaminants
    instantaneously
  • Chemical specific
  • Requires hand operated pump
  • Clan Lab kits available

24
Air Monitoring
  • PID/Multimeter Combination
  • Combination PID and CGI
  • Small and lightweight
  • Capable of reading VOCs, CO, H2S, LEL, O2
  • SO2, NO, NO2, Cl2, HCN, NH3, PH3 sensors
    available

25
Hazard Communication
  • Requires employers to inform employees of all the
    hazards associated with materials used in the
    workplace
  • MSDS Requirements
  • Employee Right to Know
  • Utilization of on-line resources is beneficial in
    determining hazardous chemical involved in meth
    production

26
Hazard Communication
27
Confined Spaces
Categorizing a Work Space
Space large enough to enter Limited or
Restricted entry or exit Not designed for
continuous worker occupancy.
NO
Not a confined Space
YES
Confined Space
Permit- Required Confined Space
Non Permit Required Space
Hazardous Atmosphere
Or
Engulfment Hazard
YES
NO
Or
Configuration Hazard
Or
Any other recognized serious hazard
28
Confined Spaces
29
Confined Spaces
  • If exit is blocked or cannot remain open it could
    result in becoming a confined space

30
Permit Required Confined Space
  • A confined space that has one or more of the
    following characteristics becomes a Permit
    Required Confined Space
  • Contains or has a potential to contain a
    hazardous atmosphere.
  • Contains a material that has the potential for
    engulfing an entrant.
  • Has an internal configuration such that an
    entrant could be trapped or asphyxiated by
    inwardly converging walls or by a floor which
    slopes downward and tapers to a small
    cross-section.
  • Contains any other recognized serious safety or
    health hazard.

31
Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Limits occupational exposure to blood and other
    potentially infectious materials since any
    exposure could result in transmission of
    bloodborne pathogens which could lead to disease
    or death.
  • Covers all employees who could be "reasonably
    anticipated" as the result of performing their
    job duties to face contact with blood and other
    potentially infectious materials.

32
Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Blood and other potentially infectious body
    fluids include
  • Semen
  • Vaginal secretions
  • Cerebrospinal fluid
  • Synovial fluid
  • Pleural fluid
  • Peritoneal fluid
  • Amniotic fluid
  • Saliva (in dental procedures), and
  • Any body fluid that is visibly contaminated with
    blood.

33
Bloodborne Pathogens
  • Hepatitis B
  • Standard requires the employer to offer HBV
    vaccinations to employees affected.
  • Hepatitis C
  • HIV
  • HBV and HIV are most commonly transmitted
    through
  • Sexual Contact
  • Sharing of hypodermic needles
  • From mothers to their babies at/before birth
  • Accidental puncture from contaminated needles,
    broken glass, or other sharps
  • Contact between broken or damaged skin and
    infected body fluids
  • Contact between mucous membranes and infected
    body fluids
  • Accidental puncture from contaminated needles and
    other sharps can result in transmission of
    bloodborne pathogens.

34
Bloodborne Pathogens
  • BBP Standard addresses
  • PPE, Work Practices Engineering Controls
  • Hygiene Practices
  • Decontamination and Sterilization
  • Signs, Labels Color Coding
  • Emergency Procedures (for exposures)

35
Conclusion
  • General Duty Clause 5a(1)
  • The OSHA Catch-All
  • Each employer --Shall furnish to each of his
    employees employment and a place of employment
    which are free from recognized hazards that are
    causing or are likely to cause death or serious
    physical harm to his employeesShall comply
    with occupational safety and health standards
    promulgated under this Act.Each employee shall
    comply with occupational safety and health
    standards and all rules, regulations, and orders
    issued pursuant to this Act which are applicable
    to his own actions and conduct

36
Conclusion
  • HAZWOPER has a direct application to Clan Lab
    operations and clean up
  • Each company should develop a Health Safety
    Plan to deal with issues associated with Clan
    Labs
  • Hazard recognition, evaluation, and training is
    key
  • Preplanning and preparation facilitate site work
  • Dont forget other applicable OSHA standards
  • Utilize the resources provided
  • No job is worth jeopardizing worker safety
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com