Hi,
Anyone have a good procedure for chemical spills?
Or should I say just make a bit of a blanket statement and say we follow manufacturers guidance?
:)
Posted 23 August 2022 - 07:18 AM
Hi,
Anyone have a good procedure for chemical spills?
Or should I say just make a bit of a blanket statement and say we follow manufacturers guidance?
:)
Posted 23 August 2022 - 08:01 AM
Greetings AJL,
The question is a bit vague. Chemical spills of or on what? On food? While cleaning a facility? Dangerous/toxic/caustic chemicals? Overdosing?
Generally chemical spills are a potentially bad thing in most cases and I can hardly believe chemicals manufacturers provide guides that favor spillages or overdoses.
Can you please elaborate more to help the readers understand the situation better?
Regards!
Posted 23 August 2022 - 08:17 AM
Hi,
Could you please add more details and clarification about your question.
Which standard are you working on? which clause?
Thanks
Posted 23 August 2022 - 10:16 AM
Thanks - BRC Physical and chemical control prevention
Posted 23 August 2022 - 04:44 PM
We have a fairly basic clean up sign in our chemical cage. Basically it's isolate the spill, notify supervisor, use spill kit to remove chemicals, clean then have QC inspect area.
I have photos that correspond with each step in case of any language issues.
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Posted 23 August 2022 - 06:22 PM
Great! Thanks for that. :)
We have our chemical rep coming next week so I asked him to think about how to include it in the training
Posted 26 August 2022 - 05:53 PM
Miss Frankie we haven't currently got a spill kit. Could you link to one to buy?
Posted 26 August 2022 - 10:51 PM
We got ours on Amazon, they have a fairly large selection depending on how big (or small) you need. And they are OHSA approved.
Posted 27 August 2022 - 06:54 AM
Thanks
Posted 02 September 2022 - 10:58 AM
Hello,
new bullet point in BRCGS V9, 4.9.1.1: correct?
The guideline states that "provide enclosed areas around appropriate oil and chemical tanks and ensure relevant personnel are trained in spill procedures"
Hope this helps :)
Leila
Posted 02 September 2022 - 11:26 AM
Yes in a way.
But I need a procedure, for handling spills.
What do people do? Are spill kits common?
Posted 02 September 2022 - 01:29 PM
Yes in a way.
But I need a procedure, for handling spills.
What do people do? Are spill kits common?
I think it depends on the auditor. At my last job, we got dinged for not having a spill kit. At my current job, they got a 100 on the SQF audit last year, and didn't have one.
This is what we have for handling spills. We use a lot of photos to help with language barriers and to draw attention.
Posted 02 September 2022 - 05:47 PM
Spill kits usually come with procedures on how and when to use. Take that information and include it in your SOP. Review your SDS sheets to see if any chemicals require additional steps. Make sure to include where you dispose of the soiled materials, contract waste management etc. You could include it as a section in your waste management SOP.
A good example is Universal Lab Pack Spill Kit in Stock - ULINE.
Best of luck!
Posted 02 September 2022 - 08:14 PM
I thought I added a photo to my last post showing the sign we used for chemical spills, but I forgot to click something so here it is.
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Posted 02 September 2022 - 08:31 PM
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