CSULB COLLEGE OF
NATURAL SCIENCES & MATH (CNSM)
ROOM ACCESS
RESTRICTIONS AND SAFETY RULES
(September 2007)
I. ROOM ACCESS LABEL POLICY
This handout is part of a safety program developed to protect both contract workers and CSULB people.1 For your protection, every room in the CNSM has been checked for safety hazards, and labels indicating room access restrictions have been put on every room entry door. These "ROOM ACCESS" labels say how much safety training is required to enter the room when you are not "escorted" by people (students, professors etc.) who are familiar with the hazards in the room. Everyone is required to read and comply with the ROOM ACCESS LABELS each time unescorted entry into a science area is made.
This access training program was designed to give you the training you need to safely enter and/or work in nearly all unoccupied science areas. Managers, Supervisors and Contractors are responsible for communicating and enforcing these rules for their workers. Extra copies of this guide and Material Safety Data Sheets for science chemicals present in science areas can be provided by the CNSM Safety Office - (562) 985-5623.
II. ROOM ACCESS LABELS: WHAT DO THEY MEAN & WHAT DO THEY LOOK LIKE?
There are three different ROOM ACCESS labels:
1. “ANY KEYHOLDER” (WHITE)
Anyone who has a key may enter
these rooms unescorted. Everyone who
enters still must follow the simple safety rules in "section III" of
this handout. Some of these rooms may
contain small amounts of hazardous materials.
2. “SPECIAL PERMISSION REQUIRED” (WHITE WITH BLUE DOT OR BLUE)
Once you have understood and agreed to follow the safety rules in this handout, you may enter these rooms unescorted. Understanding the safety rules in this handout gives you the “special permission” you need to enter. People who enter these rooms when no science people are around need to be especially careful because of the chemicals and/or equipment in these locations. There may be especially dangerous and/or large amounts of chemicals. Potentially dangerous equipment may be running or could start automatically. You are allowed to physically escort untrained people (like subcontractors) or train them using these handouts.
3. “DO NOT ENTER - SAFETY ESCORT REQUIRED” (ORANGE OR RED)
You MAY NOT enter these rooms unless you are escorted by the person whose name is posted at the doorway or by a CSULB Safety person, or by the appropriate CNSM administrator. About 12 rooms are marked with these ORANGE labels. Most of these rooms have items that make unescorted entry dangerous. Access to these rooms should be requested in advance to prevent delays in your work schedule.
EMERGENCY NOTE: Normally
these rooms are safe enough for allow for immediate rescue removal of an injured
worker.
III. SAFETY RULES WHEN WORKING IN SCIENCE AREAS
1) LOCK UP! If YOU unlocked a room, never leave it unattended. If you leave a room that you unlocked, you could be held responsible if someone gets in and hurts themself, or steals or damages items in that room in your absence. Nearly every room has expensive items and dangerous chemicals. ALWAYS LOCK UP WHEN YOU LEAVE!
2) No food or drink is allowed in labs. Smoking is not allowed in University buildings.
3) Follow safety instructions or warnings given by people who use the space.
4) If no CNSM or trained people are present, read and follow the ROOM ACCESS labels/rules
5) Do not enter a room posted on the outside with a sign stating "KEEP OUT", "DANGER" etc. Sometimes
conditions inside are considered dangerous enough, or sensitive enough, to require people to keep out for a period of time.
6) When entering areas containing hazardous materials or hazardous equipment do not touch items on lab benches, in fume hoods, etc. DO NOT PUT ANY TOOLS OR OTHER ITEMS ON LAB BENCHES OR SINK AREAS THAT ARE MARKED WITH WARNING LABELS (see below).
7) If equipment or chemicals are in your way, ask a person who works in the room or someone from the science contact list (below) to move them to a safe location. Do not move them yourselves. For example, you might find chemicals stored under a sink which you must repair. You must not work on the sink if the chemical containers block your way, or could be tipped or broken during your job. Someone from the CNSM must move the chemicals for you.
8) Always read warning signs and labels on items in the rooms, such as "Danger - High Voltage", or "corrosive", "poison", "flammable", "oxidizer" etc. Don't touch and use extreme caution.
9) Always read signs placed on trash cans
in rooms. Plastic and metal trash cans
or baskets are sometimes used for special purposes. For example, some trash cans are used for the
collection of broken glass. DON’T
TOUCH containers used for the collection of radioactive waste (see
labels below) or biohazardous “Medical
Waste” (containers with RED bags and “biohazard” labels).
NEVER THROW BROKEN GLASS OR SHARP ITEMS IN THE REGULAR TRASH! You MAY throw them in the box used to collect broken lab glass, found in most labs.
10) Do not touch areas marked
"radioactive". Here are several examples of
radioactive materials labels:


“Caution – Radioactive Materials”
These labels usually have red letters on a yellow background. All rooms containing radioactive materials
have been labeled "Caution - Radioactive Materials" and require
access training for anyone who is unescorted.
If you need to work on anything labeled RADIOACTIVE you must first call
the Radiation Safety Office at x55623.
10) Always read signs placed on sinks. Most rooms that use radioactive material have at least one sink used for the rinsing of radioactive glassware; these sinks are clearly labeled and the sink, drain pipes, counter top and faucet areas may be contaminated.
11) Note the locations of eyewash/shower units as you enter the laboratories. Look at how they work. Once turned on, they must be turned-off by hand (turn-off is NOT automatic). Knowing how they work can prevent a flood if a falling object accidentally turns one on.
Use these units if you get chemicals on your body or in you eyes -- either from accidents involving lab chemicals or from YOUR own service chemicals such as corrosive cleaners, strippers, flux, battery acid, etc. To use the shower or eyewash, turn it on and flush the body part for 15 minutes. The floor will flood (most units have no drains) but your health is more important!
12) NEVER clean up or touch a puddle of liquid unless it is OBVIOUSLY from a water leak (it could be acid or a poisonous chemical).
13) Always check for natural gas problems when you enter a room. Some labs have more than 20 outlets and students occasionally forget to turn one off.
14) If an item is knocked-over or there seems to be any problem with materials or equipment (noise, smell, heat, odd things in the trash, etc.) please report it to your supervisor, the Science Safety Office, and/or public safety. Use 911 as necessary.
15) Some CSULB buildings have RADIOACTIVE EXIT signs. Never touch an EXIT sign without first getting radiation safety training from the campus Radiation Safety Office. Report any missing or damaged signs to your supervisor, who should immediately call Radiation Safety (x55623).
IV. CONTACT LIST FOR ENTRY, QUESTIONS OR PROBLEMS
PUBLIC SAFETY (they're
trained & have home #'s) 54101 ( Dial
911 in emergencies)
Science Safety Office (J. Mellon & John De La Cuesta) 55623 Cells 562 843-8811 & 714 222-0963
Dean Kingsford................................................. 51521
Assoc. Dean Fung......................................... 57898
Director of Facilities Loeschen ......................... 54939
Chemistry Dept. .............................................. 54941
Chemistry Lab Manger Joyce Kunishima ........ 54954
Biology Dept.................................................... 54806
Biology Staff Tom Douglass……. .................... 55602
Microbiology Staff Diane Graham ................. 54857
Marine Biology Staff Kim Anthony................. 54907
Geology Dept. ................................................. 54809
Geology Staff John Francis ............................. 54928
Physics Dept. .................................................. 54924
Physics Staff Tony Torres .............................. 54853
Campus Safety & Risk, Gary Pons…………. 58893
1 In conformity with CSULB's Cal/OSHA Injury, Illness and Prevention Plan Access.09