Jan 26, 2012 1:33 PM,
By Laura Walter
From http://ehstoday.com/
The Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office has filed felony
charges against the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) and
chemistry professor Dr. Patrick Harran in connection to the January 2009
death of a university lab research associate.
On Dec. 29, 2008, 23-year-old Sheri Sangji sustained fatal second- and
third-degree burns while working a lab research associate at the
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). According to a 2009
Cal/OSHA report, Sangji was working to transfer a t-Butyllithium, a
highly reactive liquid reagent, when her syringe plunger became
separated from the barrel. The reacting chemical spilled onto Sangji and
caught fire, leaving her with burns over 43 percent of body. She died
18 days later. (More...)
Monday, January 30, 2012
Felony Charges Sought in UCLA Lab Assistant Death
Dorm fire: Drake Hall, UW-La Crosse
News from the campus
News from the local paper
Monday, December 19, 2011
Supreme Court Will Hear RCRA Case
The
U.S. Supreme Court announced that it will hear a case in which Southern
Union, a Texas-based natural gas distributor, was convicted in a U.S.
District Court of criminally violating RCRA by knowingly storing 140
pounds of waste mercury without a RCRA permit for over two years in a
dilapidated facility in Pawtucket, Rhode Island. While the case is
based in an alleged RCRA violation, the Supreme Court is primarily
interested in how a lower court ruling that defends the authority of a
judge, rather than a jury, to determine the number of days the company
was in violation comports with case law.
The case involves two legal arguments. First, whether U.S. EPA had
the authority to enforce a Rhode Island regulation that requires that
conditionally exempt small quality generators (CESQG) obtain hazardous
waste permits. Rhode Island is authorized by EPA to run its own
hazardous waste regulatory program. Under RCRA, Rhode Island may also
issue regulations that are more stringent than the federal baseline
program, which it did with the CESQG permitting requirement. Southern
Union asserted that EPA was not legally empowered to enforce Rhode
Island’s CESQG provision because it is not part of a federally
enforceable state plan. The company also argued that EPA has been
“irrationally” inconsistent in its prior pronouncements of EPA's
position on the regulation of CESQGs and on which state regulations will
receive federal authorization. (More....)
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Integrating safety into green building design
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UW-Milwaukee Cambridge Commons green roof |
Friday, December 2, 2011
Students injured in flash fire at Minnesota school science lab
Published December 02, 2011, 06:48 AM
By:
Mary Lynn Smith and Abby Simons, Minneapolis Star Tribune / MCT
Dane Neuberger was front and center when the classroom science experiment blew up, setting his face on fire.
MAPLE GROVE, Minn. (MCT) — Dane Neuberger was front and center when
the classroom science experiment blew up, setting his face on fire.
"I
was on fire," said 15-year-old Neuberger, who is being treated at
Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis for second-degree burns to
his face, neck and right hand. "People were screaming, and everyone
just ran out."
Three other students treated for burns at the hospital were released. (More....)
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Hazmat response to nitric acid spill
A spilled container of nitric acid forced the evacuation of a University of Arizona laboratory building on Monday.
No one was hurt in the incident, which occurred in UA's Shantz building.
The spill occurred when a glass container filled with between 500 and 1000 ml of nitric acid dropped and broke. According to the Tucson Fire Department, someone tried to neutralize the spill with sodium bicarbonate, causing an exothermic reaction that melted the copper piping on compressed air containers in the lab.
An adjacent street was closed while the fire department and a hazardous materials control team responded to the incident.
COMM rules to get new titles
The administrative codes previously administered by the Department of Commerce are being re-titled to reflect the move to the Department of Safety and Professional Services. "Comm" codes will be "SPS" codes as of January 1, 2012. According to DSPS, the current code numbers will be bumped up by adding 300 to the existing number. For example, the current Comm 81 will change to SPS 381, and Comm 5 to SPS 305.
Contact information
Office of Safety and Loss Prevention
University of Wisconsin System Administration
(608) 262-4792