Jay, At Stanford Univ., we've been using a home-grown chemical inventory management application that analyzes our chemical inventories by regulatory hazard classes (DOT, building code, fire codes, etc.) and generates vital reports including: - Building/ fire code compliance reports - SARA and HMIS-type regulatory reports - Customizable and ad-hoc queries, based on chemical hazard characteristics and regulatory classifications In last few years now, we've had upwards of ~10 other universities across the country that have joined us in forming a consortium user group for this application. Please feel free to email if you'd like more detailed info of this consortium's goals and efforts. Yong Kim Stanford University EH&S Hazardous Materials Management Program >>X-Sieve: CMU Sieve 2.2 >>Approved-By: rstuart**At_Symbol_Here**UVM.EDU >>User-Agent: Microsoft-Outlook-Express-Macintosh-Edition/5.02.2022 >>Date: Wed, 7 Jul 2004 14:29:44 -0400 >>Reply-To: Jay Rappaport>>Sender: DCHAS-L Discussion List >>From: Jay Rappaport >>Subject: [DCHAS-L] Chemical and Biological Inventory Hazard Analysis >>To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**LIST.UVM.EDU >> >>I would like to know what environmental health and safety departments >>elsewhere have in the way of chemical and biological inventory analysis >>software. We are developing an application for Temple University that >>analyzes inventories for hazardous chemicals based on various hazardous >>chemical lists, in addition to the NFPA data, peroxide formers, chemicals >>listed by the drug enforcement agency and performs EPCRA analysis for EPA >>reporting. Based on this information, chemical and biological inventories >>can be analyzed by safety personnel and transmitted to emergency responders >>as needed. Is this something other organizations need as well? >> >>Jay Rappaport, Ph.D. >>Professor and Temple University IBC Chair
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