Online WMD Hazmat Training: What reference materials do you carry in the cab of your engine?

 

 

These are the reference books that I recommend fire departments and/or company officers purchase and carry on your engine. Hazmat incidents in order to have a good outcome require immediate information. Does anyone carry these or other reference materials in their command binders?

 

You always want to use a minimum of (3) three sources of information when making decisions.

 

The Emergency Response Guidebook is a given. We all get these for free. They cost nothing for emergency responders. Key thing to remember about the ERG is that I want to NAG you about remembering the new additions to the ERG that include evacuation distance updates and more. Take the time to memorize how the ERG is put together. Have you done this yet? Well, believe it or not, you have already started without knowing it... Because when I talk about my being a NAG, what I am really saying is that the inside of the ERG is divided into:

 

Numerical Information (UN Guide Numbers, e.g. 1203 = gasoline)

Alphabetical Information (Individual Chemicals Listed Alphabetically)

Guide Numbers (what to do section)\

 

 

 

The second book that you will have to purchase on your own is the CDC NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical Hazards. This is an excellent source that is updated annually that gives you exposure and response consideration information.

 

 

The third book is written by and published by the American Conference of Industrial Hygenists and is also upated annually. This book focuses on exposure levels. Here's some information:

 

This companion document to the ACGIH® Threshold Limit Values and Biological Exposure Indices book serves as a readily accessible reference for comparison of the most recently published values: 2010 Chemical Substance TLVs® from ACGIH®; AIHA Workplace Environmental Exposure Limits (WEELs); the OSHA Final Rule PELs; RELs from NIOSH; MAKs from the German Commission for the Investigation of Health Hazards of Chemical Compounds in the Workplace; and carcinogenicity designations from ACGIH®, OSHA, NIOSH, MAK, IARC, U.S. NTP, and U.S. EPA. The book includes a CAS number index.

 

 

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Thanks for being a NAG! I actually love acronyms especially for medical and hazmat stuff that for me is hard to remember.
CHEMTREC is your friend! If you have a cell-phone
and reception, you have CHEMTREC. Next best thing
to being there. Yes, the ERG is wonderful as well!

Also don't forget the numbers to your local railroads
if you have them in your area. Most RRs maintain a
HazMat database and resource base.

Number to POISON CONTROL is good as well. All of
these are national in scope, free to use, available 24/7
and the info can be written on the inside cover of your
ERG. Just need a cell-phone.

Good bare-bones hazmat resource setup for limited budget
departments and also requires minimal training. Just dial
and do what they tell you to do. They are experts in their
fields.

FEMA also offers free online training that you can do at
the station or at home. Upon completion, they even print
a cert for you to add to your training jacket. Again, this
training is available to all.
Union Pacific Railroad Emergency Contact Information:


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