Hazardous Material Management and Hazard Communication provides students and safety, health and environmental professionals with the regulatory information and best practices to manage hazardous materials and communicate hazards to their employees and first responders. Safety professionals working for national companies frequently must know both federal and state laws and regulations, as well as OSHA’s Hazard Communication Standard (HCS), to make sure their organizations comply with hazardous waste management, transportation, and disposal rules and regulations. Topics include: labeling of hazardous materials, including language and symbols; transportation and handling of hazardous materials; and training issues, including written plans, and cultural and literacy issues. This text was based on The Safety Professionals Handbook, 2nd Edition. Attention Instructors: Desk copies of this textbook are available to instructors upon request who are considering the book for course adoption. Download Desk Copy Request Form An Instructor's Guide containing questions and answers for each of the chapters in this textbook is available upon request at no cost to instructors who have adopted the handbook for a course. There is also a graphics package available for download with all of the graphics in jpeg format for use in the classroom. You must provide the title and number of the course, the semester/term offered and the expected enrollment. Download Instructor's Guide Request
Author: Joel M. Haight
ISBN Print: 978-1-885581-71-6
ISBN Digital: 978-1-885581-82-2
Format: Print and Digital
Publisher: American Society of Safety Engineers
Copyright: 2012
Pages: 214
About the Author
Joel M. Haight, Ph.D., P.E., is the Branch Chief of the Human Factors Branch at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) at their Pittsburgh Office of Mine Safety and Health Research. For the nearly 10 years prior to this appointment, Dr. Haight served as an Associate Professor of Energy and Mineral Engineering at the Pennsylvania State University. He has a Ph.D. and Master's degree in Industrial and Systems Engineering both from Auburn University. Dr. Haight worked as a manager and an environmental and safety engineer for the: Chevron Corporation for 18 years, prior to joining the faculty at Penn State. He has nearly 40 peer-reviewed publications and is the editor-in-chief of the American Society of Safety Engineer's The Safety Professionals Handbook. He is a professional member of American Society of Safety Professionals, American Industrial Hygiene Association and the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society.
Table of Contents
Foreword
About the Editor and Authors
Chapter 1: Hazardous Waste
Chapter 2: Hazardous Material Spills and Response
Chapter 3: Hazard Communication and Right-to-Know Regulations Issues
Chapter 4: Hazard Communication Benchmarking and Performance Criteria
Chapter 5: Best Practices in Hazard Communication
Index
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