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To save you time we've identified the questions that are most frequently asked about using Laboratory Safety Institute services. Q: Help!! What do all these acronyms mean? Is there a guide somewhere? A: Yes there is a guide here! If you don't find what you're looking for, send email to the Labsafety-L list and ask. If you're not a member of the list and cannot join, send an e-mail to Dave Roberts. See our acronym dictionary and let us know if it's not there. (Because if it's not, we want to add it.) The larger or executive safety committee must be chaired by an individual of authority, and counseled by an experienced safety professional. This person needs to be one who can get things done. If this person is not in place, the rest will fall by the way side. All committees will need to address the following issues (to name a few of the main ones):
All of the above procedures should be formalized in writing, including the formal set up of the Safety Committee structure, their function and purpose. Q. How many square feet per student is recommended for class/laboratories? A. The recommendation of NSTA and LSI is to have the lesser of 24 students per lab, the design capacity of the room, or 55 sq ft per student for lecture/lab combo rooms and 45 sq ft per student for lab only rooms. The Laboratory Safety Institute has published a report on class sizes and lab accidents. "There's No Safety In Numbers" summarizes the research in this area, state and federal regulations, and successful approaches to dealing with the problem. See the Web Store to order.
A. Interpretation of Lab Standard language given in 1990 ( original web rendering) summarizes "...substances that are considered to have a high degree of acute toxicity are those substances which are highly toxic or toxic as defined under the HCS and may be fatal or cause damage to target organs as a result of a single exposure or exposures of short duration."The HCS (Hazard Communication Standard) definitions are in Appendix A of that standard, and the definitions for highly toxic and toxic (cut and pasted from the Appendix A webpage on 2/9/99) read as follows:
Having these definitions, go back to the interpreatation above and note
the separation of its two clauses with the following emphasis added: Note that there is no dose specified in the second clause, which makes the second clause utterly irrelevant. Short story - pretty wide open and the list is never, never, ever complete. A. The article "Contact lenses and chemicals" in the American Chemical Society Division of Chemical Health and Safety Magazine May/June 1997 issue was surprising and impressive. A number myths-repeated-as-fact are debunked, and there seem to be two bottom lines: (1) no one policy is right for every workplace, and (2) none of the horror stories appear to be true.Also see the position of the American Optometric Association on contact lenses in "industrial" environments. Q. How do I dispose of mercury waste? My regular waste contractor says they can't take it. A. LSI recommends that spilled mercury be stored in sealed containers and labeled "Mercury to be Recovered" Companies like D.F. Goldsmith in Evanston, Illinois will purchase mercury for recycling. 312-869-7800 Q. What is the "respirable fraction" of a particulate airborne contaminant? A. Q. What goggles should I recommend for my labs? A. Q. What is Chemical Inventory Software and Requirements? A. ChemTrack Description of the software (V3.03)Chemical Inventory and Organization Data Base for use with Microsoft
Excel Q. Where do I buy a seminar notebook to use it as a reference? A. You can order by phone, mail, fax, email,
or at our web store.
We accept MasterCard, Visa, US Checks, and institutional purchase
orders. Q: What is the Laboratory Safety Institute course requirement? A. The course has a low technical requirement. And, anyone who is willing to ask to have something explained is (1) greatly appreciated and (2) given a clear supportive answer. The course covers the fundamentals of lab safety and lab safety programing (which works for most safety programs). The summer we had a science teacher and the facilities manager from a private secondary school attend the 24-hour short course. The facilities manager (she) wanted to better understand the needs and issues faced by the science faculty. If you head custodian does not go home with a sufficiently long list of ideas and actions to make your college safer, he/she may have been sleeping. Seriously, he/ she can have as much of the registration fee back as he/ she thinks is fair (up to and including 100%).
Q. What is the new benefit for its organizational members? A. NACHOs.The Laboratory Safety Institute has established a new benefit for it's organizational members. LSI is offering a complimentary Lab Safety Program Review. The 60-90 minute teleconference reviews more than thirty lab safety program components. The components are scored on a scale of zero to three. Maximum score is 100. Participants in the Lab Safety Program Review have found it to be an effective way to evaluate their current program and discover simple, inexpensive, and practical ways to achieve improvement. Q. Does LSI offer scholarship assistance? A.
There are
two ways ... Q. How do I make sure my membership is still current? A. You
should receive a renewal notice. You may wish to also consider having your
school become an organizational member. The school can designate
five representatives. Q. Where can you take the CHO exam? A. Pick a date/location or purchase a certificate good for any of these of future 24-hour short course. The schedule page The
topics covered include: introduction, scope of the problem, accidents,
legal aspects, emergency planning, chemical storage and disposal,
biological and animal hazards, eye and face protection, disposal of
chemicals, electrical safety, fire control, handling glassware,
recordkeeping, bloodborne pathogens, lab standard, employee involvement,
needs assessment, lab inspection, compressed gases, radiation, safety
equipment, and effective safety programs. Q. My child's high school AP Biology teacher is talking about doing blood group testing in the HS laboratory (includes the pricking of fingers and blood drops on slides). At the university we no longer use any blood or body fluids in lab--I'm sure this must be the same guideline for high schools. Besides how would they dispose of the sharps and other waste without an autoclave. Help--I need to go to the teacher with some published guidelines. Thanks A. Blood typing can be done safely and have significant educational benefit when conducted with proper care and precautions. If you would like to receive a copy of the National Biology Teachers Association policy statement on this subject, I will be happy to fax or mail it to you. NABT supports these activities with proper precautions. Our organization agrees with NABT. Would you like a copy? (Info@labsafety.org) Q. I work in the chemistry department at Normandale Community College. Each term, we have students sign a chemistry laboratory safety agreement. Do these safety agreements hold up in court if a student is injured due to failure to follow the agreement? Also, within our department, there is debate over whether or not we can enforce the dress code we put in the student contract. The issue is of most concern in the summer, when students often come to lab in shorts, sandals, and tank tops or halter tops. What can you advise on this problem? A. LSI calls them rules agreements and not contracts.
The agreements are a great way to emphasize the importance of safety; they
speak for themselves as a piece of evidence in a court case; and they
provide a fair basis for imposing sanctions.
Q. I was wondering if I could get a copy of your "101 Ways to Convince People That Safety Is Important." I am always looking for good advice on employee relations and safety. ? A. 101 Ways to Convince PeopleQ. How do we make suggestions of a Lab Safety book, publication media or product? A. Please send Dr. James Kaufman your suggestions at Info@labsafety.org Following are some questions which need answers. If you have the time and inclination, please submit! ( Mike Faris and mention that you're responding to the FAQ page request for answers. THANKS.)NACHOs! And everybody else! Please
submit any/all suggestions, comments, and potential FAQ items to me at Dave
Roberts
The Laboratory Safety Institute phone:
508-647-1900 URL:
http://www.labsafety.org |
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