Equipment
such as hardhats, respirators or safety gloves might someday be all that stands
between a worker and serious injury. The correct PPE, the training to use it
and a comprehensive safety program are each components of personal protective
equipment implementation as laid out in a 40 hour HAZWOPER program.
Equipment
such as hardhats, respirators or safety gloves might someday be all that stands
between a worker and serious injury. The correct PPE, the training to use it
and a comprehensive safety program are each components of personal protective
equipment implementation as laid out in a 40 hour HAZWOPER program.
The Right Equipment
The first
step is to choose the proper PPE for the worker and the job. OSHA has minimum
requirements for PPE that must be met and these guidelines are laid out in 40
hour HAZWOPER training. For example the equipment must be durable, capable of
being disinfected and be marked only to identify the manufacturer. Equipment
that doesn't meet OSHA specifications should not be used.
The PPE
should be appropriate to the job. Issuing dust masks to employees who need full
respirators is not an appropriate response. If a job requires respirators, then
that is the equipment that should be used. PPE should be issued with a worst
case viewpoint. It's not about the incident that will happen; it's about the
incident that might happen.
The Right Training
Employees
must be properly trained in the use of the PPE. A 40-hour HAZWOPER course is
part of this training but doesn't take the place of hands on sessions with
equipment on the job site. Some employers are under the mistaken impression
that face to face 40 hour HAZWOPER training is better than online training
because they don't need a hands-on session when the employee returns to work,
but OSHA guidelines say workers must train with the actual equipment they will
use not just the equipment used in a course. This is a site-specific training
requirement - using the actual equipment
an employee will be using in their job.
Site-specific
training drills ensure that workers know how to put on, use and take off the
equipment. It verifies that equipment is fitted correctly and all seals are
intact. Training should also include proper maintenance of the PPE, including a
regular program of inspection and replacement.
The Right Program
PPE is one
component in an array of tools designed to keep workers safe. The 40-hour
HAZWOPER course is only a piece of a comprehensive safety plan that includes
engineering controls, manufacturing practices, passive protection and more. PPE
is an important element in the program but should be the defense of last resort
in case of contamination or accident.
Companies
with carefully designed safety programs have fewer incidents every year. This
translates to improved productivity and employee morale, not to mention better
worker safety. HAZWOPER doesn't exist by itself. It is a program with specific
requirements and responses for hazardous waste handling, but depends on
companies to use common sense when it comes to safety. Anything from ice on the
sidewalk to fuses in an electrical panel could lead to disaster even if not
part of the 40-hour HAZWOPER domain.