Department Safety Coordinator Training Spring 2007 1/10/2007 Introduction - EH&S Updates - Storm Water Pollution Program - Learning Management System - New Blink resources - Sharecase 1/10/2007

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Transcript Department Safety Coordinator Training Spring 2007 1/10/2007 Introduction - EH&S Updates - Storm Water Pollution Program - Learning Management System - New Blink resources - Sharecase 1/10/2007

Department Safety
Coordinator Training
Spring 2007
1/10/2007
Introduction
- EH&S Updates
- Storm Water Pollution Program
- Learning Management System
- New Blink resources
- Sharecase
1/10/2007
Injury & Illness
Prevention Program
Mandated In 1991
Under CCR
Title 8, Section 3203
(CA Labor Code, 6401.7)
1/10/2007
Overview of the Eight Requirements of IIPP
1. Responsibility
2. Compliance
3. Communication
4. Safety and Health Hazard Identification/
Periodic Inspections
5. Mishap Investigation
6. Mitigate/Abate
7. Training Program
8. Record Keeping
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1.Responsibility
Identification of the person or
persons responsible for
implementing the Safety Program
at the local level
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EXAMPLE
• Department Head
• Department Safety Committee
• Manager
• Supervisor
• YOU
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• Environment, Health and Safety
(858) 534-3660
- Education
- Consultation
- Compliance/Enforcement
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Who has a
Department Safety
Committee?
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Responsibilities for E, H, S
• Identify Safe and Healthy Practices in
your Office/Lab/Facility
• Provide MSDSs and other resources
• Consult EH&S or cognizant support
department
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2. Compliance
• Are there consequences for being
conformant? Negligent?
- Performance Evaluation
- Supervisor’s field notes
- Fines, citation, Notice of Violation
- SAFE, Spot/Star Awards, etc.
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3. Communication
• Institutional Committees
• PPM, Notices/Flyers, Blink
• Department Safety Meetings
• Safety Bulletin boards
- EH&S Newsletters
- Emergency Guide
- Mandatory postings
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Higher Priority Information
• How to report an on-the-job injury
• Program documents/MSDS location
• General Rules for Office/Lab/Facility
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• Emergency Action Plan
- Update at least annually
- Communicate its contents
- Evacuation Procedures
- Assembly location
- Essential numbers
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Considerations
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- Field staff
- Student workers
- Off-site locations
- TES workers
- Volunteers
- Contractors, visitors
- ESL/ASL
- Disabled
- Minors
Fire/Life Safety
- Temporary use of extension cords
- Electrical panels with 30” clearance in
front and to the side
- Obstructions-free exits, aisles,
corridors, stairs
- Compressed gas cylinders secured
- Fire Extinguishers
P.A.S.S.
R.A.C.E.
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Area-specific Issues
- Eye Protection
• Everyone who enters must have
eye protection
• For corrective lenses, protection
must fit over eyewear
• Unless they are prescription
safety glasses
- No working alone in the shop
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Use Universal Precautions
- Assume all human blood or other
potentially contaminated material is
treated as infectious
- Know how to respond to medical
emergencies
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4. Hazard Identification/
Periodic Inspections
• At least annual work area self-audit
• Conducted by representative(s) from
home department or EH&S*
* - high risk environments
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Suggestions
- Conduct audits regularly (e.g. at the
same time each year)
- Share results with staff
1/10/2007
1/10/2007
Monthly Fire Inspection
1. Confirm the extinguisher is visible, unobstructed, and in designated location
2. Verify the locking pin is intact and the tamper seal is unbroken
3. Examine for obvious physical damage, corrosion, leakage, or clogged nozzle
4. Confirm pressure indicator is in the operable range and lift to ensure still full
5. Ensure operating instructions on nameplate are legible and facing outward
6. Check date of last service on tag. (within the past 12 months)
7. Initial and date the back of the tag.
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Potential unannounced inspections by
university staff, County or State
inspectors
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5. Mishap Investigation
Why investigate?
• Identify problem areas
• Prevent repeat incidents
• Eliminate hazards
• Identify root cause
• Decrease workers comp costs
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Basic Questions
- What happened
- Why did it happen
- What has been/will be done to
prevent repeat
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Jan Kraak, MS, RN, COHN-s
Accident/Incident Investigation
Specialist
Work Comp/Significant
- Training
- Tools/Equipment
- Environment
- Leadership
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6. Mitigate/Abate
Methods used to correct unsafe or
unhealthy conditions & work practices
in a timely manner
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- Allocation of resources
- Written programs
- Evaluate equipment
- Evaluate work processes
- Posting of the affected
area/element
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- Prompt reporting of discrepancies
by employees.
- Local mechanism?
- Timely and accurate communication
of discrepancies to maintenance.
- Tracking system?
1/10/2007
7. Training Program
• All workers MUST be properly trained
- Maintain record of training
documentation
- Department keeps copy of locally
conducted training
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• Training from EH&S
- Visit http://blink.ucsd.edu/ehs
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Other Sources for Training
• Consultant/vendor
• Job-specific training from your supervisor
or other “competent/qualified
person”
• Safety content in general meetings at least
once a month – document attendance and
items discussed
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8. Record Keeping
• Audit/inspection reports
- Corrective actions
• Training records
• Staff Meeting minutes
• Communications
• Incident reports
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• EH&S-provided training documented
on LMS (Enrollment Central)
• Department responsible for
maintaining records of local/
vendor-provided training
• MSDS/chemical inventory up-to-date
• Plans and procedures up to date
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Retention Guidelines
• Maintain training records for the
length\ of employment
• Keep inspection records and similar
documentation for 3 years
1/10/2007
Review
• UCSD Injury & Illness Prevention
Program in NOT just a one-time class
• All UCSD stakeholders (faculty, staff,
students, affiliates, and contractors have
responsibility to participate
• EH&S and Risk Management is a
centralized resource
1/10/2007
Review
• Written IIPP Plan for Work Units can include:
– Emergency Action Plan
– Safety bulletin board postings
– Chemical inventory
– Standard operating procedures (SOP)
– Area-specific procedures
– Inspection checklists
– Safety training records
– And other, similar health and safety
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documentation
UC Policy on Mgmt of Health, Safety
and the Environment 10/05
The University of California is committed to
achieving excellence in providing a healthy and
safe working environment, and to supporting
environmentally sound practices in the conduct of
University activities. It is University policy to comply
with all applicable health, safety, and environmental
protection laws, regulations and requirements.
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To meet this standard of excellence, the
University implements management initiatives
and best practices to systematically integrate
health, safety, and environmental considerations
and sustainable use of natural resources into all
activities. All University activities are to be
conducted in a manner that ensures the
protection of students, faculty, staff, visitors, the
public, property, and the environment.
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This policy applies to all members of the
University community and also to contractors
whose work is directed on a day-to-day basis by
University employees.
University activities should be considered from
the very beginning of planning an activity to
wrapping up after the actual performance of the
activity. This means evaluating the associated
hazards and environmental impacts associated
with an activity and then identifying the
appropriate protective safety and environmental
measures.
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Local EH&S offices are available
to provide assistance and consultation.
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Most frequently cited standards
•
•
•
•
•
•
Injury & Illness Prevention Program (1664/78)*
Reporting fatality or serious injury (634/3)
Portable fire extinguishers (585/3)
Hazard Communication (503/14)
Respiratory Protection (408/13)
Guarding openings in electrical boxes (325/123)
* (Total Violations/Serious violations) CY 2005
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• Asbestos (255/83)
• Emergency eyewash (231/95)
• Industrial trucks (212/67)
• Bloodborne Pathogens (208/44)
• Ladders (196/96)
• Flexible electrical cords (177/5)
• Compressed gas cylinders (175/43)
• Access work areas- aisles (150/5)
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Enterprise Risk Management
Categories of Risk
• Financial
• Legal
• Natural
• Operational
• Political
• Technological
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COST OF RISK
2004
Total University
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Questions?
1/10/2007