Here
is an interesting incident involving maintenance and good housekeeping practices.
Here is the recent story:
A university
contractor burned by chemical reaction at campus maintenance building, fire
rescue in the USA one afternoon during the week of February 17, 2019. The
contractor was burned after chemicals reacted in a maintenance building on
campus Monday afternoon. The local county fire rescue responded to the incident
at the employee-only building at about 3 p.m.. The contractor was the only
person in the environmental and hazardous waste building, near the university
police department building, at the time. No students were involved or affected
by the incident. According to the local county fire rescue spokesman, the
worker was transferring chemicals for disposal from a 50 gallon metal drum to a
50 gallon polydrum when there was a static charge.
The county
fire rescue spokesman reported that the fire caused significant burns to the
man’s upper body, chest, arms, hands and face. “He was wearing eye protection,
which was probably a very fortunate thing because he could have easily been
blinded had he not had them on,” the county fire rescue spokesman said. The
chemicals, he said, were a combination of different kinds of metal powders,
including aluminum, magnesium and chromium, as well as other substances.
Firefighters used a special fire extinguisher to put the fire out, which was
burning likely higher than 200 degrees Fahrenheit at the time of the incident.
By 4:30, the 50 gallon drum was outside the building and the temperature had
subsided to 130 degrees. The contractor was conscious and alert when he was
transferred by local County Fire Rescue to a nearby hospital.
We pray
that the worker recovers fully from his injuries.
No doubt
one of the first questions will be why was the waste not placed in a plastic
barrel originally? Next question will be what caused the spark that started the
fire. Sparks can occur from something as simple as static electricity. Or the
contractor was using a metal shovel to scope the material into the plastic
barrel. We wonder if the worker was using a metal shovel.
When we
train workers about good housekeeping practices involving aluminium fines or
dust. A worker in our industry has to be very careful not to create a dust
cloud when disposing/placing/emptying the dust into a container. Remember the
container needs to be plastic. Not a steel drum.
The
Aluminium Times magazine published an article in the past about the importance
of good housekeeping practices. The publication can be found here.
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