HAZWOPER — Brush up on cleaning!
Part of transitioning from cold to warm weather means cleaning out your storage areas to ready them for the new season. When you clean, keep in mind that chemicals and other hazards in these areas, like forklifts, can be dangerous to your health and safety.
Think before you clean!
Since storage containers and drums alike can suffer damage during winter, you need to consider if you’re prepared to handle hazardous substance cleanup operations.
Before you clean ...
Consider your training: Have you been trained to clean up spills or chemical messes (e.g., leaky containers or drums)? If not, know who to contact if you notice a spill or leak.
Inspect the storage area: Are containers and drums stored correctly? Your company’s storage area should look neat and tidy, not messy.
Training
You need to know what level of training you have before you can respond appropriately to a hazardous substance release or spill. If a release of a hazardous substance is possible, your employer may want you trained in one of the following levels:
- First responder awareness level
- First responder operations level
- Hazardous materials technician
At the awareness level, the person can recognize an emergency but takes no action beyond notifying the authorities. There is no specific number of training hours required, but the worker must have sufficient training or experience to understand the hazards described in the HAZWOPER regulation.
The operations level requires 8 hours of training. These workers may respond in a defensive fashion to contain the release from a safe distance and prevent exposures. They do not, however, attempt to stop the release.
The hazardous materials technician requires roughly 65 hours of training that includes “operations level” material. The responders may approach the point of release and attempt to stop the release.