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WHMIS

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Title: WHMIS


1
WHMIS
2
Purpose of WHMIS
  • Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System
  • Provides Information on Hazardous Materials used
    in Workplace
  • Facilitates the Process of Hazard Identification
  • Ensures Consistency of Information in all
    Canadian Workplaces

3
Federal Legislation
4
Ontario Legislation
5
Responsibilities Under WHMIS
  • Duties of the Supplier
  • Classify Product
  • Apply Supplier Label
  • Provide Material Safety Data Sheet

6
Responsibilities Under WHMIS
  • Duties of the Employer
  • Conduct Workplace Inventory
  • Ensure Proper Labeling is Used
  • Label Piping Systems/Vessels/Reactors
  • Maintain and Make Available MSDSs
  • Train Workers

7
Responsibilities Under WHMIS
  • Duties of a Worker
  • Participate in Training
  • Apply Knowledge and Training

8
Exclusions Under WHMIS
  • The Explosives Act
  • The Food and Drug Act
  • The Pest Control Products Act
  • The Atomic Energy Control Act
  • Hazardous Wastes
  • Consumer Products/Tobacco/Manufactured Articles

9
Right to Know
  • Workers have Access to Information through their
    Employer
  • Public has Access to Information through Local
    Medical Officer of Health

10
Trade Secret Protection
  • Hazardous Materials Information Review Commission
  • Tripartite

11
Trade Secret Protection
  • Criteria
  • Information Known Outside Business
  • Information Known Inside Business
  • Measures Taken to Guard Secrecy
  • Value of Information to Firm or Competition
  • Financial Expenditures

12
Information Delivery
  • Labels
  • Supplier Label
  • Workplace Label
  • Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS)
  • Worker Education

13
WHMIS Hazard Classifications
14
Class A
  • Compressed Gas
  • Any Hazardous Material that is contained under
    pressure including compressed gas, dissolved gas,
    or liquefied gas

15
Compressed Gas Cylinders
  • store and transport with safety cap
  • comply with storage restrictions
  • DO NOT store fuel gas with oxygen
  • secure in an upright position
  • use in a well ventilated area
  • use the proper type of regulator and know its
    history

16
Class B
  • Flammable and Combustible Material
  • Flammable Gases
  • Flammable and Combustible Liquids
  • Flammable Solids
  • Flammable Aerosols
  • Reactive Flammable Material

17
Flammable Materials
  • Methanol, Toluene, Butane, Ethanol
  • Store liquids in Flammable Storage Cabinet
  • Store minimum quantities in lab
  • Explosion-proof fixtures required
  • Decant in large quantities in fume hood
  • NEVER store with oxidizers
  • Keep away from heat, ignition sources, and direct
    sunlight
  • Use static lines when transferring
  • Refrigerator must meet NFPA Standard 56C (
    Flammable Material Storage Units)

18
Class C
  • Oxidizing Material
  • Any Hazardous Material which causes or
    contributes to the combustion of another material
    by giving oxygen or some other oxidizing
    substance, whether or not it is combustible.
  • Organic Peroxides

19
Oxidizers
  • Chlorates, Nitric Acid, Peroxides, Permanganates,
    Perchlorates, Nitrites, Nitrates
  • Easily oxidize metal powders, organic materials
  • Keep minimum quantities in lab
  • Segregate from other materials, such as organic
    solvents
  • Use a glass-heating mantle or sand bath to heat
    material
  • PPE and/or Explosion barriers may be require

20
Perchloric Acid
  • Perchlorate salts are explosive
  • Use a perchloric acid fume hood
  • Wash down fume hood after use
  • Never store with organic chemicals especially
    alcohols and glycerol
  • Store in a ceramic tray

21
Organic Peroxides
  • Some are very unstable
  • Sensitive to heat, friction, impact, sparks,
    light
  • Use minimum quantities in lab
  • NEVER replace unused peroxides into original
    container
  • NEVER use a metal spatula to handle peroxides
  • Refrigerate to minimize decomposition

22
Peroxide Formers
  • Have caused several severe laboratory explosions
  • Contributing Factors Oxygen, Light, Storage Time
  • Visual Identifiers Crystals, Floating wisp-like
    structures
  • Date and Dispose of within 1 year

23
Common Chemicals forming Peroxides
  • Diethyl ether
  • Tetrahydrofuran
  • Dioxane
  • Methyl isobutyl ketone

24
Class D1
  • Poisonous Infectious Materials
  • Material causing immediate and serious toxic
    effects
  • Materials which are potentially fatal or may
    cause permanent damage if inhaled, swallowed, or
    absorbed through the skin, or may burn the skin
    or eyes upon contact

25
Class D2
  • Poisonous Infectious Materials
  • Material causing other chronic or long term
    effects
  • Material which may cause dealth or permanent
    damage as a result of repeated exposure over an
    extended period of time may be an irritant to
    the skin, eyes, or respiratory system may cause
    cancer, birth defects, or sterility.

26
Class D3
  • Poisonous Infectious Materials
  • Biohazardous and Infectious Materials
  • Materials which may cause disease in humans and
    animals, such as viruses, bacteria, and fungi
    may also include cultures and diagnostic
    specimens such as blood, urine, and body tissue.

27
Class E
  • Corrosive Material
  • Material which may corrode aluminum and steel or
    human flesh
  • Material which are anhydrous corrosive gases

28
Inorganic Acids
  • Sulfuric Acid, Nitric Acid, Perchloric Acid,
    Hydrochloric Acid
  • Segregate from bases and organic compounds
  • Store in a ventilated acid cabinet
  • Know the location of eye washes and safety
    showers
  • Use a safety carriers
  • Store on lower shelves

29
Bases
  • Sodium hydroxide, Ammonium hydroxide
  • Segregate from acids and organic compounds
  • Store in a ventilated cabinet
  • Know the location of eye washes and safety
    showers
  • Use a safety carrier
  • Store on lower shelves

30
Hydrogen fluoride
  • Is extremely corrosive
  • Dissolves glass
  • Absence of immediate pain, penetration can be
    extensive, leading to serious injury or death
  • Causes severe eye irritation and skin burns

31
Class F
  • Dangerously Reactive Material
  • Materials which undergo vigorous polymerization,
    decomposition, or condensation
  • Materials which become self-reactive under
    conditions of shock, or increased temperature or
    pressure
  • Materials which react vigorously with water to
    produce a very toxic gas

32
Ethylene Oxide
  • Used as a Sterilant at hospital
  • Extremely flammable
  • Supplies its own oxygen/Chemically decomposes
  • Highly Reactive
  • Very Corrosive
  • Human Carcinogen

33
Water Reactive Materials
  • Sodium metal, acid and metal anhydrides, calcium,
    phosphorous pentachloride, aluminum
    chloride-anhydrous
  • Special storage requirements

34
Pyrophoric Materials
  • Air reactive
  • White phosphorus, diborane, diethyl aluminum
    chloride, lithium
  • Store under an inert atmosphere such as nitrogen

35
Cryogenic Materials
  • Liquid Nitrogen
  • Never use to cool substances which are
    combustible in air - explosion risk from
    condensation of oxygen from air
  • Use insulated gloves and face shield
  • Keep cryogenic substances in containers which are
    not tightly closed to prevent explosive pressure
    build-up
  • Use only equipment designed for cryogenic
    materials

36
General Dry Chemicals
  • Relatively innocuous or unreactive
  • No special storage requirements

37
Chemical Compatibility
  • Never store incompatible materials together
  • Vapours will react
  • Chemical Compatibility Chart

38
WHMIS Labels
39
Supplier Label
  • Product Identifier
  • Hazard Symbols
  • Border
  • Bilingual
  • Risk Phrases and Precautions
  • First Aid, Supplier Information
  • Precautions
  • Safe Handling Precautions
  • Reference to MSDS

40
Laboratory Labels
  • No Supplier Label Required
  • If Controlled Product
  • originates from lab supply house
  • intended solely for lab use
  • package quantity is less than 10 kgs
  • If Package Label contains
  • product identifier
  • statement indicating MSDS available
  • risk phrases/precautionary measures
  • first aid measures

41
Laboratory Samples
  • No Supplier Label Required
  • If the Controlled Product
  • container is less than 10 kgs
  • intended for lab analysis
  • If supplier provides a label containing
  • product and/or chemical identifier
  • supplier identifier
  • statement Hazardous Laboratory Sample for hazard
    information or in an emergency call plus
    emergency phone number

42
Workplace Label
  • Product Identifier
  • Safe Handling Precautions
  • Reference to MSDS

43
Workplace Label Uses
  • Transfer of material from a Supplier Labelled
    container to another container
  • Replacement of a damaged Supplier Label

44
NFPA Hazard Classifications
45
Laboratory Samples
  • No Supplier or Workplace Label Required
  • If controlled product is
  • produced in workplace
  • originates from lab supply house
  • intended solely for lab use
  • product and/or chemical identifier
  • Hazardous Laboratory Sample statement which
    includes an emergency phone number

46
MSDS Contents
  • Hazardous Ingredients
  • Preparation Information
  • Fire Explosion Hazard
  • Toxicological Properties
  • First Aid Measures
  • Product Information
  • Physical Data
  • Reactivity Data
  • Preventative Measures

47
Hazardous Ingredients
  • Chemical Identity
  • CAS Number
  • LD50 Species and Route
  • LC50 Species and Route
  • Concentration
  • PIN Number

48
Product Information
  • Product Identifier
  • Manufacturers/Suppliers Name and Address
  • Emergency Telephone Number
  • Product Use

49
Preparation Information
  • Prepared by (Group, Department, etc.)
  • Phone Number
  • Date of Preparation

50
Physical Data
  • Odor Threshold
  • Vapor Pressure
  • Coefficient of Water/Oil Distribution
  • Boiling Point (oC) and Freezing Point (oC)
  • Evaporation Rate (Butyl Acetate1)
  • Physical State
  • Odor Appearance
  • Specific Gravity (Water1)
  • Vapor Density (Air1)
  • pH
  • Percent Volatile (by volume)

51
Fire Explosion Hazard
  • Conditions of Flammability
  • Means of Extinction
  • Sensitivity to Mechanical Impact
  • Sensitivity to Static Discharge
  • Flashpoint (oC) and Method
  • Upper and Lower Flammable Limits ()
  • Auto ignition Temperature (oC)
  • Hazardous Combustion Products

52
Class A Fires
  • Are fires fueled by materials that, when they
    burn, leave a residue in the form of ash
  • Paper, wood, cloth, rubber, and certain plastics
  • Extinguisher type Water, Dry Chemical

53
Class B Fires
  • Fires which involve flammable liquids and gases
  • Gasoline, paint thinner, grease, propane,
    acetylene
  • Extinguisher type Carbon Dioxide, Dry Chemical

54
Class C Fires
  • Fires that involve energized electrical wiring or
    equipment (motors, computers, electrical panels).
    Note once the power has been cut, a Class CF
    fire becomes one of the other classes
  • Extinguisher type Carbon Dioxide, Dry Chemical

55
Class D Fires
  • Class D fires involve exotic metals, such as
    magnesium, sodium, titanium, and certain
    organometallic compounds such as alkyllithium and
    Grignard reagents

56
Reactivity Data
  • Stability
  • Incompatible Materials
  • Conditions of Reactivity
  • Hazardous Decomposition Products

57
Toxicological Properties
  • Irritancy to Product
  • Effects of Acute Exposure
  • Evidence of Carcinogenicity, Reproductive
    Toxicity, Teratogenicity or Mutagenicity
  • Routes of Entry
  • Exposure Limits
  • Synergistic Products
  • Sensitivity to Product
  • Effects of Chronic Exposure

58
Preventative Measures
  • Personal Protective Equipment
  • Engineering Controls
  • Spill and Leak Procedures
  • Waste Disposal
  • Handling Procedures and Equipment
  • Storage Requirements
  • Special Shipping Information

59
When a Spill Strikes
  • 1) Assess the risk
  • Minor Spill, handled by personnel within lab or
    department
  • Major Spill, isolate area, Declare a Code Brown,
    HAZMAT Team required
  • Provide HAZMAT Team with MSDS for spilled
    material, quantity spilled

60
When a Spill Strikes
  • 2) Select personal protective equipment
  • consult MSDS and other literature sources
  • 3) Confine the spill
  • Speed Counts
  • Limit the spill area by blocking, diverting, or
    confining spill
  • Use absorbents, tiger tails, drain plugs, dikes

61
When a Spill Strikes
  • 4) Stop the Source
  • 5) Evaluate the Incident Implement Clean-up
  • Used absorbents should be considered hazardous
    waste

62
When a Spill Strikes
  • 6) Decontaminate
  • Decontaminate site, personnel, equipment by
    removing or neutralizing the hazardous materials
  • 7) Complete Incident Report

63
First Aid Measures
  • Inhalation
  • Eye Contact
  • Ingestion
  • Skin Contact

64
Additional Information
  • MSDSs Must be Readily Available
  • 3 Year Expiry Date
  • New Information becomes Available

65
MSDS Standardization
  • International Organization for Standardization
    (ISO)
  • American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
  • International Labor Organization (ILO)
  • European Union (EU)

66
Canadian Acceptance Conditions
  • Meets CPR Information Requirements
  • Includes Statement This product has been
    classified according to the hazard criteria of
    the CPR and the MSDS contains all the information
    required by the CPR.

67
WHMIS II
  • Proposed Modifications and/or Changes to Current
    WHMIS laws
  • Exempt categories may be required to follow
    labeling and MSDS requirements, such as Consumer
    Products, Explosives, and Pest Control Products
  • No official changes to WHMIS laws have occurred

68
Worker Education
  • Generic
  • Site Specific
  • Annual Review

69
Occupational Hygiene
70
Routes of Entry
  • Inhalation
  • Skin Absorption
  • Injection
  • Ingestion

71
Physical Forms
  • Dust
  • Mist
  • Fume
  • Vapor
  • Gas

72
Action of Toxins
  • Acute Effects
  • Chronic Effects
  • Latency Period of Disease
  • Sensitizers

73
Dose-Response Relationship
  • Effect is Directly Related to Dose
  • No Effect Level

74
Basis for Exposure Standards
  • Chemical Analogy
  • Animal Experimentation
  • Human Epidemiological Data

75
Occupational Exposure Standards
  • Guidelines
  • ACGIH, Occupational Health and Safety Act
  • Threshold Limit Value (TLV)
  • Short-term Exposure Limit (STEL)
  • Ceiling

76
Methods of Control
  • Engineering Controls
  • Administrative Controls
  • Personal Protective Equipment

77
Engineering Controls
  • Elimination
  • Substitution
  • Local Exhaust Ventilation
  • General Ventilation
  • Isolation
  • Preventative Maintenance

78
Personal Protective Equipment
  • Respirators, Gloves, Eye Protection, etc.
  • The Human Factor
  • Training Essential

79
Emergency Planning
  • Moral Reasons - Good Corporate Citizen
  • Legal Reasons - Legislation/Court Action
  • Economic Reasons -

80
Objectives
  • Prevent Death Injury
  • Reduce Damage to Plant and Equipment
  • Get Back to Business ASAP

81
Emergency Planning
  • Analysis
  • Procedures
  • Evacuation Plan
  • First Aid Treatment
  • Exercises and Drills

82
Inventory
  • Annual Update and Review Required
  • Feb 1st Compliance Date

83
Duties and Responsibilities
  • Departmental Supervisor and/or Manager
  • Responsible for WHMIS System within Department
  • Provide Departmental WHMIS Trainer
  • Facilitate Training
  • Ensure Departmental Trainer fulfils their duties

84
Duties and Responsibilities
  • Departmental WHMIS Trainer
  • Departmental Inventory
  • Departmental WHMIS Training
  • Training Records
  • Ensure proper labeling is used
  • Maintain Departmental WHMIS Manual

85
Duties and Responsibilities
  • Campus Safety Officer
  • Riverside/Civic Campuses
  • Murray Hyatt, 798-5555 x3336
  • General Campus
  • Paul A. Cyr, 737-8415
  • WHMIS Train-the-Trainer
  • WHMIS Manual

86
Duties and Responsibilities
  • WHMIS Clerk, Civic Campus
  • Jeff Watkin, ext. 3955
  • Material Safety Data Sheets
  • Hospital WHMIS Inventory

87
Duties and Responsibilities
  • JHSC
  • Annual Review of WHMIS System
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