|

OSHA Focuses on
Combustible Dust Hazards at Alabama Companies
ATLANTA -- Over the last 16
months, compliance officers from OSHA have made 26 visits to Alabama
companies where employees may be exposed to potential combustible
dust hazards, resulting in 132 citations for workplace safety and
health violations, with 81 percent categorized as willful, serious,
repeat or failure to abate.
The visits are part of the
agency's ongoing National Emphasis Program to reduce employees'
exposure to combustible dust hazards. Nationally, 3,662 violations
have been identified during 813 inspections. Housekeeping, hazard
communication, personal protective equipment, electrical and general
duty clause violations are cited most frequently as a result of
these inspections.
"Any company that has
combustible dust, or thinks that it may have combustible dust, needs
to intensify housekeeping, review hot work processes, evaluate
electrical equipment for possible Class II locations, prohibit
smoking or flames in dust laden areas, ensure that relief venting on
dust collection systems releases the dust to a safe location, and
develop and/or review an emergency action plan," said OSHA Regional
Administrator Cindy Coe.
Dust fires and explosions can
pose significant dangers in the workplace and can occur when five
different factors are present. The five factors are oxygen, an
ignition source (heat, an electrical spark or a spark from metal
machinery), fuel (dust), dispersion of the dust and confinement of
the dust. These five factors are referred to as the "Dust Explosion
Pentagon." If any one of these factors is removed or is missing, an
explosion cannot occur.
Industries affected by the
emphasis program include: agriculture, chemical, textile, forest
products, furniture products, wastewater treatment, metal
processing, paper processing, pharmaceutical and metal, paper and
plastic recycling.
OSHA develops National Emphasis
Programs to focus on major health and safety hazards that are
recognized as nationally significant. These programs provide
guidance to the OSHA field offices for planning and conducting
inspections consistently across the nation. Additional information
regarding this particular initiative is available from the OSHA
regional office located at 61 Forsyth St. S.W., Atlanta, GA 30303;
telephone 404-562-2300.
For more
information, visit www.osha.gov.
|