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Posts Tagged ‘hazwoper’

Video1025feHazWoperThe key to a safe and efficient job always starts with training. A great addition to your safety training library, our safety videos are valuable refreshers for weekly toolbox or tailgate safety meetings.

If you are the first responder in a hazardous materials emergency, then you need to know where to get HAZWOPER information. This video covers HAZWOPER issues, including: emergency response plans, hazardous materials clean up operations, and emergency procedures. But there is more. Here you’ll find information on Facility Emergency Response Plans, SPCC, NFPA 704 System, Emergency Response Guidebook, MSDS, Shipping documents, and more!

Run Time:   16 minutes

Cost: $99.95 for VHS – $135 for DVD

Purchase video from JB Safety & Rescue Services.

To keep current with OSHA regulations for 24- or 40-hour HazWOPER qualification, individuals must take an annual refresher.

hazwoper_refresher

Our course is designed to meet annual requirements for students who are trained at the 24- or 40-hour HazWOPER level.

Date:  June 22, 2010
Time:  8:30am – 5:00pm

Register for class.

Contact JB Safety & Rescue Services for further information.

hazwoper_refresher

To keep current with OSHA regs for 24- or 40-hour HazWOPER qualification, individuals must take an annual refresher.

Course is designed to meet annual requirements for students who are trained at the 24 or 40 hour HazWOPER level. Review how to recognize and respond to hazardous material spills/releases, containment techniques.  Also covered:  regulatory requirements.

Get a head start on remaining compliant in 2010 with 24- or 40-hour HazWOPER qualifications , by signing up for one of the two upcoming classes:

April Class

Date:  April 20, 2010

Time:  8:30am to 5:00pm

June Class

Date:  June 22, 2010

Time:  8:30am – 5:00pm

Download class registration flyer.

Contact JB Safety & Rescue for more information.

hazwoper_trainingSeating is limited, so register now for course which provides awareness training necessary for OSHA’s HazWOPER program

Date: March 22, 2010

Time: 7:30 am – 4:00 pm

Location: AGC 6212 Ferris Sq., San Diego, CA 92121

Cost: AGC Members – $250.00 / Non-Members – $395.00

This full day, interactive class – taught by Jeff Beeler, JB Safety & Rescue – will help students:

  • Understand the purpose of OSHA and its role in regulating occupational safety
  • Use Site Characterization to establish problems that may exist in your workplace and measures that can be implemented to eliminate hazards
  • Identify hazardous materials existent in the workplace and the possible methods, symptoms and preventative measures of exposure
  • Encourage the use of Material Safety Data sheets (MSDS) to identify and properly handle hazardous materials
  • Familiarize yourself with materials, compounds and mixtures that may present flammable, explosive, chemical or radiological hazards.
  • Emphasize the importance of personal protective equipment in limiting hazardous exposure

HazWOPER refers to five types of hazardous waste operations conducted in the United States under OSHA Standard 1910.120 “Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response.” The standard contains the safety requirements employers must meet in order to conduct these operations.

The training covers basic understanding of hazardous materials and how to appropriately provide initial response to emergencies resulting from these materials.  The HazWOPER standard covers 5 specific areas of operations, including:

  1. Clean-up operations required by a governmental body, whether Federal, state local or other involving hazardous substances that are conducted at uncontrolled hazardous waste sites (including, but not limited to, the EPA’s National Priority Site List (NPL), state priority site lists, sites recommended for the EPA NPL, and initial investigations of government identified sites which are conducted before the presence or absence of hazardous substances has been ascertained).
  2. Corrective actions involving clean-up operations at sites covered by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA) as amended (42 U.S.C. 6901 et seq).
  3. Voluntary clean-up operations at sites recognized by Federal, state, local or other governmental bodies as uncontrolled hazardous waste sites.
  4. Operations involving hazardous waste that are conducted at treatment, storage, disposal (TSD) facilities regulated by 40 CFR Parts 264 and 265 pursuant to RCRA; or by agencies under agreement with U.S.E.P.A. to implement RCRA regulations.
  5. Emergency response operations for releases of, or substantial threats of releases of, hazardous substances without regard to the location of the hazard.

Download class flyer or contact JB Safety & Rescue to register.

Video1041feHazWoper copy

A great addition to your safety training library, video is a good refresher for weekly tailgate meetings.

The key to a safe and efficient job starts with training. Designed to meet training requirements of subject title. Describes how to don chemical protective clothing, how to properly remove it, and decontamination procedures. Includes actual HAZWOPER footage of proper decontamination from real life situations.

Runtime: 14 Min.

Cost:  $99.95 for VHS  – $135 for DVD

To purchase, contact JB Safety & Rescue.

SafetyFirst

Let us know what training services are most important to your business or organization and we’ll tailor classes to meet your needs.

The new year is rapidly approaching; over the next few weeks, what better time to start thinking about the training and safety services your company needs to remain efficient, productive and profitable – and safe.

At JB Safety & Rescue Services, our instructor base is knowledgeable in every aspect of safety training, with professional expertise in federal, state and local governing laws – including OSHA – for applications in:  confined space entry and rescue; hazwoper, hazard communications, hazardous materials; first aid/CPR; fall protection, scaffold awareness; trenching and excavation, trench rescue; OSHA 8, 10, 24, 30 and 40 hour; disaster preparedness…….and so much more!

Get a head start on your training for 2010 and be on top of your safety game – let us know now what you need and/or want to see in the months ahead and we’ll take it from there.  If you have a specific time frame let us know that as well.

Send us your Safety Training Wish List for 2010.

hazmat id and recognition

Video covers what you need to know to correctly recognize and identify hazardous materials – great for tailgate safety meetings!

The key to a safe and efficient job starts with training. This video is a must have for any company safety library, especially for companies who deal with chemicals or other hazardous materials.  Perfect for tailgate safety meetings, video quickly and efficiently shows your employees how to recognize and identify hazardous materials.

Preview Clip.

Video can be purchased directly from JB Safety & Rescue Services.  To purchase, contact us.

Runtime: 5 Min.

Cost:  $69.95 for VHS  – $105 for DVD

Hazardous Spill IconKnowing the difference will help keep you and your employees safe during any spill situation.

The following is taken from OSHA.gov, under “Frequently Asked Questions.”

An incidental release is a release of a hazardous substance which does not pose a significant safety or health hazard to employees in the immediate vicinity or to the employee cleaning it up, nor does it have the potential to become an emergency within a short time frame.  Incidental releases are limited in quantity, exposure potential, or toxicity and present minor safety or health hazards to employees in the immediate work area or those assigned to clean them up.  An incidental spill may be safely cleaned up by employees who are familiar with the hazards of the chemicals with which they are working.

The properties of hazardous substances, such as toxicity, volatility, flammability, explosiveness, corrosiveness, etc., as well as the particular circumstances of the release itself, such as quantity, confined space considerations, ventilation, etc., will have an impact on what employees can handle safely and what procedures should be followed. Additionally, there are other factors that may mitigate the hazards associated with a release and its remediation, such as the knowledge of the employee in the immediate work area, the response and personal protective equipment (PPE) at hand, and the pre-established standard operating procedures for responding to releases of hazardous substances. There are some engineering control measures that will mitigate the release that employees can activate to assist them in controlling and stopping the release.

These considerations (properties of the hazardous substance, the circumstances of the release, and the mitigating factors in the work area) combine to define the distinction between incidental releases and releases that require an emergency response. The distinction is facility-specific and is a function of the emergency response plan.

JB Safety & Rescue Services can help you develop an emergency response plan that will allow you and your employees to remain safe in either an incidental or emergency spill situation.

Contact us for an on-site evaluation.

hazwoper_training

3-Day class which will be held at Applied Energy in Kearny Mesa/Central San Diego

The Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response Standard (HAZWOPER) applies to five groups of employers and their employees who are exposed or may be exposed to hazardous substances – including hazardous waste – and engaged in clean-up operations, corrective actions involving clean-up operations, voluntary clean-up operations, operations involving hazardous wastes at treatment, storage, and disposal facilities, and emergency response operations for releases of hazardous substances.

Registered individuals will learn how to recognize, protect yourself from and respond to hazardous material accidents, spills, and contamination.

Class will be held at Applied Energy in Kearny Mesa, from 8:00 am- 5:00 pm Monday, November 30 through Wednesday, December 2.  Individuals who complete the 3-day training will receive a certificate of completion from the California Specialized Training Institute (CSTI).

Register for class.

Contact us for more information.