1 / 47

First Responder Awareness Level Training 29CFR1910.120 (q) CCR 8 5192

First Responder Awareness Level Training 29CFR1910.120 (q) CCR 8 5192. UNIT 1 - “Preparation”. Unit Objectives. Identify OSHA and EPA training requirements Public Safety - Duty to Act Identify the role of the Awareness Level First Responder Reference Materials

eve
Download Presentation

First Responder Awareness Level Training 29CFR1910.120 (q) CCR 8 5192

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. First Responder Awareness Level Training 29CFR1910.120 (q)CCR 8 5192 UNIT 1 - “Preparation”

  2. Unit Objectives • Identify OSHA and EPA training requirements • Public Safety - Duty to Act • Identify the role of the Awareness Level First Responder • Reference Materials • 5 levels of response training • 2 levels of operation

  3. Hazardous Material Agencies • Defined in numerous ways • U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) • U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) • Simplified Definition

  4. Hazardous Materials Incidents “Haz-Mat” incidents are unique incidents. They require specialized protective measures not normally available to first responders AND they demand a different operational approach!

  5. Public Safety “Duty to Act” • Public safety responders have a “Duty to Act”. • Your level of involvement is defined by your employer’s Emergency Response Plan (ERP). • The actions you are expected to take should be in Standard Operating Procedure format. • NEVER exceed your level of training and protection!

  6. First responders at the awareness level are individuals who are likely to witness or discover a hazardous substance release and who have been trained to initiate an emergency response sequence by notifying the proper authorities of the release. They would take no further action beyond notifying the authorities of the release.

  7. 1. An understanding of what hazardous substances are, and the risks associated with them in an incident. 2. An understanding of the potential outcomes associated with an emergency created when hazardous substances are present. 3. The ability to recognize the presence of hazardous substances in an emergency. 4. The ability to identify the hazardous substances, if possible. 5. An understanding of the role of the first responder awareness individual in the employer's emergency response plan (including site security and control), and the U. S. Department of Transportation's Emergency Response Guidebook. 6. The ability to realize the need for additional resources, and to make appropriate notifications to the communication center.

  8. First responders at the operations level are individuals who respond to releases or potential releases of hazardous substances as part of the initial response to the site for the purpose of protecting nearby persons, property, or the environment from the effects of the release. They are trained to respond in a defensive fashion without actually trying to stop the release. Their function is to contain the release from a safe distance, keep it from spreading, and prevent exposures.

  9. 1. Knowledge of the basic hazard and risk assessment techniques. 2. Know how to select and use proper PPE provided to the first responder operational level. 3. An understanding of basic hazardous materials terms. 4. Know how to perform basic control, containment, and/or confinement operations and rescue injured or contaminated persons within the capabilities of the resources and PPE available with their unit. 5. Know how to implement basic equipment, victim, and rescue personnel decontamination procedures. 6. An understanding of the relevant standard operating procedures and termination procedures

  10. Awareness Level Response Goals 1. Recognition 2. Isolation 3. Protect 4. Notify

  11. Five Levels of Training • First Responder Awareness Level • First Responder Operational Level • Hazardous Materials Technician • Hazardous Materials Specialist • Hazardous Materials Incident Commander

  12. Operational Modes • Awareness and Operational level responders take DEFENSIVE actions. • Technicians and Specialists take OFFENSIVE actions. • The Incident Commander coordinates the response and is ultimately responsible for safety.

  13. First Responder Awareness Level Training Unit 2 - “Hazard Identification”

  14. Unit 2 - Hazard Identification Unit Objectives: - Identify the six clues to the presence of hazardous materials. - Identify the various hazard classes of hazardous materials. - Describe ways in which you can determine the specific identity of a hazardous material.

  15. Remember your four goals! 1. Recognition 2. Isolation 3. Protection 4. Notification

  16. Six Basic Clues to Recognition 1 - Occupancy and location 2 - Container shape and size 3 - Placards and labels 4 - Shipping papers/facility documents 5 - Markings and colors 6 - Human senses

  17. Clue # 1 - Occupancy and Location • Specific occupancy or general area • Fixed facilities • Five modes of hazardous materials transportation • Rail, air, marine, highway and pipeline

  18. Clue # 2 - Container Shape and Size • Classifications • Portable, fixed or transportation • Pressure • Non-pressurized, low or high pressure • Vapor Pressure and Storage • The higher the pressure, the greater the potential for catastrophic failure

  19. Break Time

  20. Clue # 3 - Placards and Labels Placards and labels used for transport are based upon DOT Hazard Class • Nine Hazard Classes • Subdivided into divisions • Refer to the DOT - ERG

  21. Hazard Class 1 - Explosives • Subdivided into 6 divisions 1.1 - Mass explosion hazard 1.2 - Projectile hazard 1.3 - Fire, minor blast or projectile 1.4 - Minor explosion 1.5 - Very insensitive explosives 1.6 - Extremely insensitive

  22. Hazard Class 2 - Gases • Pressurized or liquefied • Compressed nitrogen and liquefied petroleum gases (LPG) are examples • Product and container present hazards • Three Subdivisions • 2.1 - Flammable gases • 2.2 - Non-Flammable, Non-Poisonous • 2.3 - Poisonous Gases

  23. Hazard Class 3 - Flammable/Combustible Liquids • Flammable Liquids can be ignited at room temperature • Combustible Liquids require some degree of pre-heating to ignite • Number 1 rule - eliminate ignition sources

  24. Hazard Class 4 - Flammable Solids • Three subdivisions 4.1 - Flammable Solids 4.2 - Spontaneously Combustible 4.3 - Dangerous when wet

  25. Hazard Class 5 - Oxidizers and Organic Peroxides • Oxidizers release oxygen to enhance or intensify burn • With strong fuels, oxidizers can create conditions which which can lead to violent combustion • Many Organic Peroxides are very unstable

  26. Hazard Class 6 - Poisonous and Infectious Substances • Poisonous to human • Can include severely irritating substances • “Tear Gas”, Hydrocyanic acid, Carbon Tetrachloride • Infectious Substances • Potential to cause diseases in humans • Anthrax, human blood and many body fluids

  27. Hazard Class 7 - Radioactive Materials • Ionizing radiation hazard • Exposure does not always result in contamination • Safety Rules: • Time, Distance and Shielding • Shipped in specialized containers

  28. Hazard Class 8 - Corrosives

  29. Hazard Class 9 - Miscellaneous Hazardous Materials • ORM A - Dry Ice • ORM B - Metallic mercury • ORM C - Battery parts • ORM D - Consumer commodities • ORM E - Hazardous substances and hazardous wastes

  30. Pesticide Labels • Product name • Active ingredients • Signal word • Caution • Warning • Danger (Poison) • Precautionary statements

  31. Clue # 4 - Shipping Papers and Facility Documents

  32. Clue # 5 - Markings and Colors • Container colors are not always standardized • UN/NA identification numbers • NFPA 704 Diamond • Military markings

  33. Clue # 6 - Human Senses High TASTE TOUCH SMELL SIGHT SOUND RISK LEVEL Low

  34. Pathways to Exposure • Pathways – Hazardous substances can enter the body in different ways: • 1. Inhalation – dust, vapors, mist. • 2. Absorption (via skin or eyes) – contact with skin. • 3. Ingestion – contaminated drinking water or food. • 4. Injection – cuts or punctures of the skin

  35. Methods of Identification • Once you recognize, try to identify • Location of material name • Shipping papers • MSDSs (fixed facilities) • Facility Pre-Plans • Employees and bystanders • If you cannot safely identify, try to classify the material into a hazard class

  36. First Responder Awareness Level Training Unit 3 - “Taking Control”

  37. Objectives • Identify the technical resources available to your ERT. • Identify the procedures for initiating your Emergency Response Plan = (R.I.P.) for Awareness level responders.

  38. Steps for Using ER chemical reference materials • Recognize & Identify Hazardous Materials • Name (chemical name on container) – Placard (on drum, tank, or building). • Isolate and evacuate according to protective action distances in the chemical reference GB. • Protect others from entering spill area. • Notify your supervisor about the incident

  39. Protective Action Options • Shelter in-place • Short duration incidents • Greater hazard to attempt to move • Impractical to evacuate • Evacuation • Potential for massive fire or explosion • Long duration incidents

  40. Stepping Into Operations Territory • Doing more than reporting • Defending property and life with out controlling the release • Controlling the exposure from a distance

  41. Bulk Spill Clean-up Materials

  42. Mercury Clean-up Kit & Chemical Specific Neutralizing Agents

  43. Spill Response Kits Available

  44. Laboratory Spill Clean-up Kits

  45. Disposal of Spilled Materials • Use proper Personal Protective Equipment when handling waste materials • Use proper disposal receptacle's when disposing of waste materials • Include contaminated PPE as waste, or properly decontaminate if PPE is reusable • If hazardous chemicals are being disposed utilize proper hazardous waste labels • Find appropriate waste vendor to haul hazardous waste

  46. POMS & ASSOCIATESand VSCCFAThank You for your time!

More Related