Chemical safety: sounds straightforward, right? Youâve got your SDS, PPE, and eyewash stations. But what happens when your team mixes, sprays, or supercharges those chemicals in ways the manufacturer never imagined? With a CHMM on the mic, this is part coaching, part humor, and 100% actionable.
Key Takeaways âÂ
1. The SDS might not be helpful based on how youre using the chemical.Â
- Reality check: Most Safety Data Sheets are written based on lab conditions and "intended use"ânot how your sanitation team might be using them. Â
- Pro Tip: Ask yourself, âWas this SDS written by someone whoâs ever worn PPE, on a harvest room floor, at 2 AM?â Maybe not.
2. Exposure Limits Are GreatâIf You Can Measure Them
- Common failure: SDS says âuse respirator if above X ppm.â Great. Now⊠how are you measuring ppm in your facility?
- Real examples:
- No meter for that specific chemical
- Using outdated DrÀger tubes that are non-specific
3. âMore Isnât BetterâÂ
- Scenario: You double the chemical strength during deep cleaning due to finding some "buggies."Â Now your PPE, risk profile, engineering controlsâall need to change. Did they?
- Surprise consequences:
- Equipment degradation because the stronger solution wasnât considered $$$
- PPE may not be adequate for the levels used
4. Training Misses the Human Factor
- Youâve trained on:
- Where the SDS is
- How to handle and/or mix
- Which PPE to wear
- But you forgot to train on:
- What happens when the goggles fog up
- That instinctive move to scratch your eye with a gloved hand
- Spraying above your head and having chemical rain down your back
5. Eyewash Stations: Functional on First Shift, ???? On Off Shifts
- Classic issue: âWe check them every Monday at 9 AM.â But chemical use spikes on nights, weekends, and during deep cleans
- Also overlooked:
- Eyewashes with scalding hot water
- No eyewash where non-routine chemical usage occurs
Actionable Advice :
- Revisit every chemical on-site: How is it used, applied, stored, and disposed? Does that match the SDS?
- Evaluate your meters: Can you measure the chemical levels you're basing levels of PPE on?
- Update PPE assessments based on how chemicals are used
- Retrain your teams with realistic, scenario-based walk-throughs
- Audit all eyewash stations across all shifts, all departments, and all rarely used roomsÂ
Final Words from Joe & Jen:
- Weâre not saying you have these problems. Weâre saying weâve seen themâa lot.
- These gaps sneak in when paperwork replaces field observations.
- If you need help identifying these gaps, we do onsite audits, coaching, and training at AllenSafety.com and AllenSafetyCoaching.com.
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