** BUDGET CRISIS – RETURN THIS FORM TO THE OFFICE WHEN
DONE!**
CNSM Department of
Chemistry and Biochemistry
INSTRUCTIONS FOR
STUDENT SAFETY
VERIFICATION FORM
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Check off each item on the green form as you
address it. Obtain student signatures on the reverse side of the form
and return the completed form to the Chemistry Issue
Room within the first two weeks of class.
YOU MUST PROVIDE CONTINUOUS OVERSIGHT DURING LAB/CLASS SESSIONS! The presence of the
instructor in the laboratory/classroom is required in order to respond to
problems and to ensure that safety rules are enforced. Except for very brief intervals, instructors must
not leave their class during laboratory/class sessions. It
is your responsibility to relay the safety issues below to each of your students and to enforce these safety
provisions throughout the semester. Call
the Chemistry Issue Room x54868 or the CNSM Safety Office at x55623 if you have
questions.
Part I -
General Safety Matters
1. Right-to-know/Hazard
Communication and Labeling: We
all have the right to know (and are expected to know) about all chemicals
(including consumer products) we will be exposed to in the lab class. YOU must make sure that all unattended materials
are labeled with the NAME (no abbreviations) of the material and its HAZARD
if any (e.g. flammable, corrosive, oxidizer etc.). We consider the material to be “Unattended” once
the class has left the area. See the yellow
CNSM Label poster hanging in this room for label details. Student unknowns must bear the ID code
assigned by the Chemistry Issue Room.
2. Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS): Additional
information about chemicals/products is available in the form of Material
Safety Data Sheets from the Chemistry Issue Room, CNSM Safety Office or via the
MSDS search engine on the CNSM Safety Office Webpage. There is a link to the Safety Webpage on the
College homepage. Requests for MSDS’ will
be honored.
3. Goggle Policy: Chemical splash goggles with indirect
vents must be worn by EVERYONE as soon as anyone in the class handles a hazardous
material - NO EXCEPTIONS!!!
[INSTRUCTORS:
this includes you! Remember that you set
the example!]
Goggles are required even when using
very small quantities of a hazardous material, such as when you are adjusting
the pH of a buffer by adding a few drops of acid or base. If you wear glasses, you MUST wear the
goggles over the glasses since glasses do not provide acceptable
protection. Contact lenses are allowed
when worn under goggles. Wear the
appropriate eye protection when working with anything that can injure
the eyes, including flying particles, laser light, UV light, electric arc etc. If I see you not wearing your goggles when
hazardous materials are handled I will be required to dismiss you from the lab. Remember: ONLY those with proper goggles will
be allowed in the lab! The bookstore sells goggles.
4. No eating/drinking/food/smoking: No
food or drink is allowed in laboratories.
You must leave these
things outside, or keep them in your closed
backpacks. THIS INCLUDES PERSONAL WATER
BOTTLES!
5. Housekeeping: You must clean up after yourselves. and
make sure you clean up all spilled reagents. Never throw chemicals in the trash
or into the broken glass box, and never pour them down the drain.
[INSTRUCTORS: you MUST make sure that all spilled
reagents have been cleaned up BEFORE you leave your lab!!! Don’t forget
to inspect the balances for spills. If
you enter your lab and find spilled reagents, please notify the Safety Office
and Chemistry Issue Room personnel immediately!]
If any water is spilled on the floor, it
must be cleaned up immediately to prevent slip/fall injuries and damage to the
rooms below/adjacent etc. There is a mop
available in MLSC-302. If the water can’t be promptly cleaned up, the
Issue Room, CNSM Safety Office, and the Safety Cabinet on the 300 level of MLSC
all have inert absorbent available that can be spread to restore traction to wet floors. Prompt action is essential! Call x5-H-E-L-P for custodial help in cleaning
up large spills.
6. Conduct: Inappropriate behavior will not be tolerated. Everyone must treat each other with
respect. Visitors to the lab are not
permitted. I, your instructor, am
required to ask you to leave if you are behaving inappropriately, are disrupting
class, or are refusing to promptly and fully comply with any CNSM Safety
Policies. If you do not leave the class
when asked, I may call the campus police (x54101, 562-985-4101, or via a
hallway emergency blue/red phone).
Police will then escort you from the class. I am required to report
problems of this nature to the appropriate authority.
7. Reporting Accidents/Incidents: Please report all injuries, dangerous
equipment failures, chemical spills etc. to me, and I will then document them on
a standard CNSM Incident Report Form, available from the Chemistry Issue Room
and on-line. [Instructors should review the green CNSM
“Injury Response Procedures” poster].
Injured students should go to the Student Health Center for medical
evaluation. They may walk there with an
escort or may be transported by University Police. Neither you nor I may clean up blood! The CNSM Safety Office will do that for us once notified.
8. Medical Costs: WARNING!!! The University does NOT reimburse students
for treatment sought for injuries or illness, even when the student is injured
IN CLASS! The treatment offered by the
Student Health Center is minimal and subject to limited hours of
operation. Reasonably-priced health insurance
is available to students through the Student Health Center.
Please inform me if you think your
health might be adversely impacted by any class activity, or if you think your
state of health might adversely affect the ability of the class to perform the
activity. I will make reasonable
accommodation for you as necessary and when appropriate. You may be asked to consult your Doctor
before proceeding with an activity.
Part II - Safety Equipment and
Procedures
1. Safety shower: When
working with hazardous materials that can injure the eyes or skin, a working
emergency shower must be no more than “ten seconds” away. The path to the shower must be clear. The shower turns ON when the handle is pulled
and will not turn off until the handle is pushed up. The injured person must stay in the shower
for 15 minutes minimum. Contaminated
clothing must be removed. MOST SHOWERS
HAVE NO DRAIN! Don’t worry about
flooding the floor, the health of the person is more important. Never apply sodium bicarbonate or any other
treatment to the injury – flush with water only!
2. Eyewash: The
same rules apply as above. During the
15 minute flushing, the injured person should use her/his fingers to hold
eyelids open and CNSM Safety should be called, and also 911 as necessary. Do not worry about flooding the floor. Inert absorbent is available in the Safety Cabinet to put on
the wet floor.
3. Fire extinguishers: These
are in the room or just down the hall in a box.
They should only be used by trained people. DON’T BE A HERO. Evacuate the room and pull the fire alarm as
appropriate.
4. Laboratory attire: Close-toed footwear must be worn at all
times (all semester long, from the second day of class through the last day) in
any lab class that will EVER use hazardous chemicals at any point during the
year. The easiest way to ensure
compliance with this rule is to store a spare pair of close-toed shoes in your
locker. You must also wear a lab coat or apron in this lab. Shoulders
must be covered. If you forget to wear
close-toed shoes, you can purchase booties as a temporary measure at the
bookstore for less than $1.00.
[INSTRUCTOR: you are encouraged to
require your class to wear additional
protection such as lab coats instead of aprons; covered arms and legs, socks
etc. You may NOT revoke the minimum requirement
for aprons or lab coats.]
5. Emergency evacuation procedure & route: We
must always keep the doors to the lab closed during the lab session, but we can
still hear the alarms since they sound inside each lab. If the alarm sounds, or you are ordered out of
the lab, remember to TAKE YOUR BACKPACK!
Turn off Bunsen burners etc. if possible. EVERYONE MUST GET 200 FEET
AWAY from the building – Do not bunch-up just outside the doorway!!! [INSTRUCTORS: tell
the class which exit would be safest for them, and lead them out when the alarm
sounds]
6. Emergency phone boxes: These red or blue boxes are located on
walls in the science building hallways and in elevators. Use them to speak directly to CSULB police,
or dial 911 from a standard campus office or pay phone. Use cell phones only as a last resort as they
may connect to Highway Patrol and thus slow down the response.
7. CNSM Safety Cabinet: [INSTRUCTORS: A supply of safety items
is available to you to help make your class safe. Usually the Issue Room will provide such
things, but some classes are “after hours”.
Help yourself to the first-aid kit, safety labels/information, inert absorbent
for spill/slip prevention, warning signs etc. that are kept in the cabinet --
but notify CNSM Safety if you do as we want to keep it stocked. Your building door key opens these cabinets,
located near PH2-214 and in the MLSC 300 level hallway.]
8. Chemical and/or biological hoods: These hoods are used to protect people when
lab work may produce harmful or bad-smelling/smoky emissions. Gas masks,
respirators or dust masks are usually not allowed for protection on campus. To use
the hood for protection, the glass sash MUST be at or below the sash
"stop" catch. If arrow stickers
are in place, the sash MUST be at or lower than those arrow markers. Never put your head inside the fume hood when
chemicals are present. Don't use the
interior of the hood as a writing desk!
Report defective/alarming hoods to CNSM Safety promptly. A effective/suspect hood may not be used for
protection.
Part III - Chemical and
Equipment Hazards
INSTRUCTORS: You are required to know which
chemicals will be used in your lab and the appropriate use/handling/disposal
procedures. Ask the course coordinator
if necessary.
1. Chemical storage and incompatibilities: Always return chemicals to their proper
place, and store them compatibly! Hazardous
liquids must be stored in secondary containers such as trays or buckets but
remember to store incompatibles in separate trays. Separate acids from bases, oxidizers from organic
materials such as combustibles/flammables/reducing agents etc. It is CRITICAL that you all remember that nitric
acid will react violently with organic materials such as acetic acid! Always use a
“bottle carrier” or other secondary containment carrier when transporting any
chemicals to or from the lab.
Also watch out for flammable materials such as
alcohols, acetone, ethers etc. and keep them away from ignition sources. NEVER store them in standard refrigerator/freezers!
These are ignition sources (door
opens, light comes on, spilled flammable ignites). If you must keep your flammables cold, store
them ONLY in special “Flame-rated” refrigerators. Read
the labels on the refrigerator so you know what kind it is! If you open a bottle of ether, don’t forget
to write the “opened” date on it as old ether may form explosive compounds.
2. Chemical Wastes: Most
labs have several, DIFFERENT waste containers.
You MUST make sure you know which container is the correct one for your waste! Ask me if you’re not sure! Otherwise you could cause a fire, explosion
or some other unwanted chemical reaction.
Containers must not be overfilled.
It is everyone’s responsibility to NOTIFY THE CHEM. ISSUE ROOM WHEN A CONTAINER
IS ¾ FULL. They will then replace the container with an empty one. Waste containers must be kept closed when not
in use. Remember, DO NOT FILL A WASTE
JUG MORE THAN ¾ FULL!!!
ONE
LAST TIME: WATCH OUT! DO NOT FILL A WASTE JUG MORE THAN ¾ FULL!!
[INSTRUCTORS: You are required to close any
open waste containers at the end of your
lab session]
3. Acids and Bases: Watch out
for these corrosives as they can cause severe burns and blindness. Never mix acids and bases in a common waste
container, or it may blow up! Use
caution when adding concentrated acids or bases to a solution. "Do what you ought'er, add acid to
water". Neutralize tiny acid
spills/drips (NOT injuries) with bicarbonate solution.
4. Toxins: Most of the reagents used in the lab are toxic
poisons. Ingestion, inhalation, and skin contact must be avoided. Even small amounts of some chemicals can kill
immediately. Lists of the lab chemicals
used are available from the Chemistry Issue Room. We Instructors will provide specific
safety/handling warnings as these materials are introduced into each lab
exercise.
5. Carcinogens:
Some chemicals may be classified as carcinogenic (capable of causing
cancer) in addition to the other hazardous properties (e.g. Benzene is a
flammable liquid, is toxic, but also can induce leukemia with extended exposure).
6. Radioactive
materials typically are not used in these classes.
7. Biohazards: Some classes use moderately hazardous microbes like E.coli. Microbial waste and contaminated items must be collected and autoclaved prior to disposal. Items contaminated with human blood/blood products must be collected in specific RED containers.
8.
Scientific glassware: If glass tubing or a thermometer must be inserted in
a rubber stopper or cork, LUBRICATE IT so it goes in easily. If you don’t it may break off and cut you!
9. Handling and reporting of chemical spills: Call the Chemistry
Issue Room for assistance in cleaning up
significant spills or spills which you do not feel capable of addressing safely. Once remediated, I will report the spill on the CNSM Incident
Form. Call 911 and/or pull the fire alarm if necessary to address a spill that
may impact others in the building.
10. Broken glass and other sharp items: Broken
glass must be cleaned up promptly, but NEVER put sharp items in the regular
trash!! Put them in the special “Broken
Glass” box. When full, notify Chemistry Issue
Room personnel. Do not overfill and do
not let the box get wet or too heavy. Brooms, dustpans etc. are kept in the Issue
Room for laboratory clean-up jobs. If
the broken glass is contaminated with a hazardous material, package and label
it as hazardous waste. Needles must be
discarded into approved needle boxes [ INSTRUCTORS:
You must follow the CNSM Safety Office Needle Handling Policy”(on their
website) when using needles.]
11. Water reactive (also air-reactive) chemicals
are especially dangerous. You will be
alerted and given special instruction if such materials are introduced into the
lab.
12.
Oxidizing chemicals (such as hydrogen peroxide, and many chemicals whose names
end in “ate”) are especially dangerous and may ignite or form
explosive compounds on contact with organic materials such as flammables, combustibles,
or other reducing materials, OR reducing agents such as metals etc. Oxidizers may not be mixed with or stored
beside these materials. You will be alerted and given special instruction if oxidizers
are to be handled. Remember, watch out
for nitric acid, it is a very strong oxidizer and may react violently with
organic materials such as acetic acid!
13.
Reproductive Hazards: Some
common chemicals, once in the body, target male and/or female reproductive
systems or developing fetuses. As in the
case of the toxic and carcinogenic chemicals, it is imperative that everyone in
the lab strive to avoid exposure to the chemicals through use of the fume hood,
gloves etc. Some low level exposures may
be unavoidable. Anyone with concerns
about chemical exposures associated with this lab can take the list of the chemicals
associated with this lab to their medical doctor to consider if participation
is appropriate.
14. Use and
handling of compressed gas: Only a person who has completed the CNSM Gas Cylinder
Safety Training may move gas cylinders or hook up regulators. Liquid nitrogen safety training will be
presented if it is introduced into the lab.
15. Equipment
hazards: We will discuss this according to use in the lab [INSTRUCTOR:
consult course coordinators] Some equipment is dangerous if improperly
used (lasers, centrifuges etc.) MOST
equipment is expensive and fragile! Specific safety issues associated with
equipment used in this lab will be presented when the equipment is first
used. Anyone who is misses all or part
of that equipment safety instruction will not be allowed to use the equipment.
Part IV-Fieldwork
and Travel Hazards
See CNSM Field Project Safety Guide as needed. STU.SFTY.VERIF.CHEM.Instruc..8.06.doc