Don A. Long
CAIH, CEAS
I
Southwest Research
Institute Laboratory
Pine Bluff
Chemical Agent Disposal Facility
PO Box 2013
0
White Hall,
AR 71612
870-541-493
0
It’s an ongoing process in academia. We strongly recommend too.
Here’s a poster we developed to help educate.
http://www.utexas.edu/safe ty/ehs/lab/no_pants_no_shoes.pdf
Dennis Nolan
The University of Texa s at Austin
From: DCHAS-L Discus
sion List [mailto:DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**list.uvm.edu]
On Behalf Of Larry McLouth
Sent: Thursday, September 29, 2011 12:25 PM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**LIST.UVM.EDU
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] Leg Coverings in Labs
Berkeley Lab:
Safety glasses with side shields, long pants and closed toe shoes are requi red upon entry to a lab space
Lab coat and chemically resistant gloves are additionally required when han dling chemicals.
This PPE is supplemented with goggles, aprons etc., depending on the materi al and degree of hazard
Regards
Larry
On 9/29/2011 8:55 AM, Shiel, Dan wrote:
I am interested to benchmark what other organi zations do/ require regarding leg coverings in labs. Are legs require d to be covered in all labs? Or in some labs, but not others (e.g., i n chemistry labs, but biology/ biotech)? I realize that the default answer most of us who are EHS professionals would provide is “yes, of course leg coverings are required in labs!”, but a gain I am curious to learn what others actually doing and if the issue is d irectly addressed via your site CHP or other documents.
My site currently “strongly recommends” leg coverings in all labs and require them in labs using radioisotopes in o ur CHP (and in general have very few folks who actually wear shorts and/or skirts in labs, but some do on occasion), but are re-visiting this issue as part our ongoing risk assessment process.
Regards,
Dan
Dan Shiel, MBA, CSP, CHMM
Director, Risk & Quality Management Services
Pfizer La Jolla
10777 Science Center Drive
San Diego, CA 92121
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