| Steps Requiring Minimal Expense |
1. Have a written health, safety and
environmental affairs (HS&E) policy statement.
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2. Organize a departmental HS&E committee
of employees,management, faculty, staff and students which will meet regularly to discuss
HS&E issues.
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3. Develop an HS&E orientation for all new
employees and students.
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4. Encourage employees and students to care
about their health and safety and that of others.
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5. Involve every employee and student in some
aspect of the safety program and give each specific responsibilities.
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6. Provide incentives to employees and students
for safety performance.
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7. Require all employees to read the
appropriate safety manual. Require students to read the institution's laboratory safety
rules. Have both groups sign a statement that they have done so, understand the contents,
and agree to follow the procedures and practices. Keep these statements on file in the
department office.
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8. Conduct periodic, unannounced laboratory
inspections to identify and correct hazardous conditions and unsafe practices. Involve
students and employees in simulated OSHA inspections.
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9. Make learning how to be safe an integral and
important part of science education, your work, and your life.
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10. Schedule regular departmental safety
meetings for all students and employees to discuss the results of inspections and aspects
of laboratory safety.
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11. Require every prelab/pre-experiment
discussion to include consideration of the health and safety aspects.
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12. Forbid working alone in any laboratory and
working without prior knowledge of a staff member.
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13. Don't allow experiments to run unattended
unless they are failsafe.
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14. When conducting experiments with hazards or
potential hazards, ask yourself these questions:
- What are the hazards?
- What are the worst possible things that could go wrong?
- How will I deal with them?
- What are the prudent practices, protective facilities and equipment necessary to
minimize the risk of exposure to the hazards?
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15. Require that all accidents (incidents) be
reported, evaluated by the departmental safety committee, and discussed at departmental
safety meetings.
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16. Extend the safety program beyond the
laboratory to the automobile and the home.
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17. Allow only minimum amounts of flammable
liquids in each laboratory.
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18. Forbid smoking, eating and drinking in the
laboratory.
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19. Do no allow food to be stored in chemical
refrigerators.
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20. Develop plans and conduct drills for
dealing with emergencies such as fire, explosion, poisoning, chemical spill or vapor
release, electric shock, bleeding and personal contamination.
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21. Display the phone numbers of the fire
department, police department, and local ambulance either on or immediately next to every
phone.
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22. Store acids and bases separately. Store
fuels and oxidizers separately.
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23. Maintain a chemical inventory to avoid
purchasing unnecessary quantities of chemicals.
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24. Use warning signs to designate particular
hazards.
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25. Require good housekeeping practices in all
work areas.
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26. Develop specific work practices for
individual experiments, such as those that should be conducted only in a ventilated hood
or involve particularly hazardous chemicals. When possible most hazardous experiments
should be done in a hood.
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Steps Requiring Moderate Expense
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27. Allocate a portion of the departmental
budget to safety.
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28. Require the use of appropriate eye
protection at all times -- in a laboratories and areas where chemicals are transported.
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29. Provide adequate supplies of personal
protective equipment -- safety glasses, goggles, face shields, gloves, lab coats, and
bench top shields.
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30. Provide fire extinguishers, safety showers,
eye wash fountains, first aid kits, fire blankets and fume hoods in each laboratory and
test or check monthly.
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31. Maintain a centrally located departmental
safety library:
- "Safety in Academic Chemistry Laboratories" American Chemical Society, 1155
16th St., N.W., Washington, DC 20036
- "Fire Protection Guide on Hazardous Materials" National Fire Protection
Association, Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02269
- "Manual of Safety and Health Hazards in the School Science Laboratory"
- "Safety in the School Science Laboratory"
- "School Science Laboratories: A guide to some Hazardous Substances" Council of
State Science Supervisors, Route 2, Box 637, Lancaster VA 22503
- "Handbook of Laboratory Safety", 4th edition, CRC Press, 2000 Corporate
Boulevard, N.W., Boca Raton, FL 33431
- "Prudent Practices in the Laboratory: Handling and Disposal of Hazardous
Chemicals", 2nd Edition, 1995
- "Biosafety in the Laboratory", National Academy Press, 2101 Constitution
Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20418
- "Safety in School Science Labs", Clair Wood, 1994, Kaufman & Associates,
192 Worcester Road, Natick, MA 01760
- "The Laboratory Safety Pocket Guide", 1996, Genium Publisher, 1 Genium Plaza,
Schnectady, NY
- "Learning By Accident", volume 1, 1997, The Laboratory Safety Workshop,
Natick, MA 01760
(All of these books are available from The Laboratory Safety Workshop.)
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32. Provide guards on all vacuum pumps and
secure all compressed gas cylinders.
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33. Provide an appropriate supply of first aid
equipment and instruction on its proper use.
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34. Remove all electrical connections from
inside chemical refrigerators and require magnetic closures.
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35. Require grounded plugs on all electrical
equipment and install ground fault interupters (GFI's) where appropriate.
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36. Label all chemicals to show the name of the
material, the nature and degree of hazard, the appropriate precautions, and the name of
the person responsible for the container.
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37. Develop a program for dating stored
chemicals and for re-certifying or discarding them after predetermined maximum periods of
storage.
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38. Develop a system for the legal, safe and
ecologically acceptable disposal of chemical wastes.
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39. Provide fireproof cabinets for storage of
flammable chemicals.
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40. Provide secure, adequately spaced, well
ventilated storage of chemicals.
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