Title: HAZWOPER Occasional Workers On-site
1HAZWOPEROccasional Workers On-site
2Personnel responsible for safety/health
- Personnel and alternates responsible for safety
and health - May vary according to job responsibilities
1a
3Safety and health hazards
- Potential exposures to chemical hazards
- Biological and radiological hazards
- Principles of toxicology
- General safety hazards
2a
4Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- Equipment selection and use
- Maintenance and storage
- Decontamination and disposal
3a
5Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- Training and proper fit
- Donning and doffing procedures
- Inspection
3b
6Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- In-use monitoring
- Program evaluation
- Equipment limitations
3c
7Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- Employers must provide and require the use of PPE
where engineering controls are not feasible
3d
8Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
- PPE must be appropriate to the
- requirements/limitations of the site
- task-specific conditions and duration
- identified hazards and potential hazards
3e
9Work 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
10Work 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
11Work practices to minimize risk from hazards
- Handling and labeling drums and containers
- Ensure that drums meet required regulations
- Inform employees of appropriate hazard warnings
of labeled drums - Ensure that safe practices are instituted
4c
12Work practices to minimize risk from hazards
- Handling and labeling drums and containers
- Standing on or working from drums or containers
is prohibited - Evacuate non-essential employees from the
transfer area
4d
13Work practices to minimize risk from hazards
- Handling and labeling drums and containers
- Use barriers to protect equipment operators from
the transfer area - Make available a continuous means of
communication - Safe removal of bulging drums or containers
4e
14Minimize risk from hazards
- Sanitation of temporary workplaces
- Privies
- Chemical toilets
- Recirculation toilets
- Combustion toilets
4f
15Engineering 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
16Medical surveillance
- Medical surveillance helps assess and monitor the
health and fitness of employees working with
hazardous substances
6a
17Medical surveillance
- Establish a medical surveillance program in the
following situations - Employees are exposed to hazardous substances
above the PEL for more than 30 days/year - Employees are exposed above the published
exposure levels for 30 days or more/year
6b
18Medical surveillance
- Establish a medical surveillance program in the
following situations - Workers wear approved respirators for 30 or more
days/year on site - Workers are exposed to unexpected or emergency
releases of hazardous wastes above exposure limits
6c
19Medical surveillance
- Establish a medical surveillance program if
employees are members of HAZMAT team - Examinations are performed under the supervision
of a licensed physician without cost to the
employee, and in a reasonable time and place
6d
20Medical surveillance
- Examinations are given as follows
- Prior to job assignment and annually thereafter
- At the termination of employment
- Before reassignment to an area where medical
examinations are not required
6e
21Medical surveillance
- Examinations are given as follows
- 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
6f
22Elements of site-specific safety and health plans
- Decontamination procedures
- Handling contaminated clothing
- Showers and change rooms
7a
23Emergency response plans
- Review 29 CFR 1910.38
- Review 29 CFR 1910.120(l)
8a
24Emergency response plans - required elements
- Personnel roles, lines of authority,
communications procedures - Pre-emergency planning
- Emergency recognition and prevention
9a
25Emergency response plans - required elements
- Emergency medical and first aid treatment
- Methods or procedures for alerting onsite
employees - Safe distances and places of refuge
9b
26Emergency response plans - required elements
- Site security and control
- Decontamination procedures
- Critique of response and follow-up
9c
27Emergency response plans - required elements
- PPE and emergency equipment
- Evacuation routes/procedures
9d
28Confined space entry
10a
29Spill containment programs
11a
30Spill containment programs - checklist
- Is the plan in writing?
- Is the written plan accessible to employees?
- Are emergency escape procedures and emergency
escape routes assigned?
12a
31Spill 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?
12b
32Spill containment programs - checklist
- Have enough employees been trained in evacuation?
- Has the emergency action plan been reviewed?
12c
33Spill containment programs - checklist
- Is the written plan kept at the workplace and
made available to employees? - Will employees be handling incidental releases?
12d
34Spill 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
12e