See answers, below
Deborah Wolfe-Lopez, MSPH
Georgia Tech
Laboratory and Chemical Safety Manager
404-385-2964
From: Hans Nielsen [mailto:hansn**At_Symbol_Here**hawaii.edu]
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2015 2:59 PM
To: LABSAFETY**At_Symbol_Here**cshema.org
Subject: [CSHEMA_LABSAFETY] Fwd: [DCHAS-L] Laboratory Spills
DCHAS thread that may interest many...
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Schroeder, Imke <ischroeder**At_Symbol_Here**ehs.ucla.edu>
Date: Tue, Jan 20, 2015 at 7:50 AM
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] Laboratory Spills
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**med.cornell.edu
Please check our web site for recommendations at UCLA:http://cls.ucla.edu/lesson-learned/safety-tips/215-when-is-it-safe-to-clean-up-a-spill-by-myself
Imke
Imke Schroeder, Ph.D.
Research Project Manager, UC Center of Laboratory Safety
Adjunct Associate Professor, Dep. of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics, UCLA
501 Westwood Plaza, 4th Floor
Los Angeles CA 90095-1605
Phone:(310) 794-5369
E-mail:ischroeder**At_Symbol_Here**ehs.ucla.edu
Web:cls.ucla.edu
From: DCHAS-L Discussion List [mailto:dchas-l**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU]On Behalf Of Kohler, Christopher E
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2015 5:01 AM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU
Subject: [DCHAS-L] Laboratory Spills
Greetings all,
I'd like to gather some data regarding how you handle laboratory spills at your workplace.
• Who handles incidental laboratory spills? . Depends on the size and nature of the spill as well as the skill level of the lab staff involved.
Trained laboratory personnel? Yes Or a company/school Hazmat team?Yes- Bigger or more dangerous materials Or the fire department? Our Atlanta Fire Department will control the situation and make sure that no one needs rescuing, but spill clean up is left to us. Very large spills are cleaned up by private contractors (multi gallon amounts, hard to reach places)
• Are there any restrictions regarding the quantity? such as those less than 1-2 liters vs. 2 liters or more? We just tell the lab staffers- if its more than you can handle yourself safely. For example- I have cleaned up relatively small amounts of minimally hazardous material that were sprayed over a large area and also liter amounts of NaOH solution that was just too large and too dangerous for the lab to clean up themselves.
• Are there any restrictions on where they are permitted to cleanup a spill? Such as inside vs. outside the fume hood? No we just tell them don't do it if it makes you feel unsafe. In the end, we are going to remove the waste from spill clean-up anyway: they are not going to keep the spill a secret, if that was their concern.
• Are there any restrictions on the type of spills that someone is permitted to clean up? such as cleanup of corrosives? or cleanup of toxic chemicals?
Again, we tell them not to clean up anything that makes them feel unsafe. Calling EHS might be determined by the need to wear a respirator to do the clean-up: Lab staff don't normally have them here. EHS does. If they have been trained in the hazards of the material, they should already have an idea of whether or not they are going to clean up a spill of a particular material themselves or call for help
• Do you provide spill kits for your laboratories? No, but we do advise them on what should be in them. Some departments here make up their own and give them out to all their labs
• Do you provide spill response training for lab personnel? For small spills, yes. Most of our training is geared toward how to decide when to call for help and who to call when you decide that you need it. All chemical safety and haz-waste personnel are 40 hour Hazwoper trained
Any other comments? EHS cleans up mercury spills and uses a monitor to determine when an area is clean.
Make sure that lab staff appreciate that used spill clean- up materials are as hazardous as the original spilled material. These materials must be disposed of as hazardous waste/ through EHS and not go out in the regular trash. Here at tech spill clean-up materials usually end up in regular trash can liners which may be mistaken as regular trash by the custodians.
Feel free to respond directly to me if necessary.
Many thanks,
Chris
Christopher E. Kohler
Laboratory Safety Manager
University Environmental Health and Safety
Indiana University
1514 E Third Street
Bloomington, IN 47405
cekohler**At_Symbol_Here**iu.edu
Hans O. Nielsen,CFPS
UH EHSO Education Coordinator
University of Hawaii Environmental Health and Safety Office
2040 East-West Rd.
Honolulu, HI 96822
808-956-5180
hansn**At_Symbol_Here**hawaii.edu
www.hawaii.edu/ehso
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