driving electrical safety in your plant

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Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant Sponsored by:

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The proper use of personal protective equipment (PPE) is a critical component of any electrical safety program, and yet proper PPE use often is overlooked, diminished, or simply disregarded by electrical workers in manufacturing. Plant Engineering will present a Webcast on December 5th at 1 p.m. CT that will discuss the importance of PPE to mitigate arc flash dangers and other electrical safety issues.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Sponsored by:

Page 2: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Today’s Webcast Sponsor

Page 3: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

• Hugh HoaglandTechnical Consultant,ArcWear.com and e-Hazard.com

• Bob Vavra

Content Manager and Moderator, Plant Engineering

Speakers

Page 4: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalW o r k p l a c e S a f e t y

Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Page 5: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

1. The 100 cal/cm² Delusion: The “err-on-the-side-of-safety-mistake”

Page 6: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace SafetyHow Bad is Bad?

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

Watch the disconnect door.

How much protection would work in this arc?

Is over protection a good idea?

What works best here, PPE or work practices or a combination?

Page 7: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

7

Arc-in-a-Box

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

Watch the disconnect door.

Arc-in-a-box energy can be two to twelve times greater when the arc is an arc in a box situation.

Page 8: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

8

Arc-in-a-Box

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

Watch the disconnect door.

Arc-in-a-box energy can be two to twelve times greater when the arc is an arc in a box situation.

Page 9: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

9

Arc-in-a-Box

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

Watch the disconnect door.

Arc-in-a-box energy can be two to twelve times greater when the arc is an arc in a box situation.

Page 10: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

10

“Tracking” Arc

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

“Tracking” arcs are “arcs” which conduct through skin and “pop out” between skin and clothing.

• Can cause ignition of clothing in an electrical contact

• Usually occurs at higher voltages

Page 11: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

11

“Tracking” Arc

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

“Tracking” arcs are “arcs” which conduct through skin and “pop out” between skin and clothing.

• Can cause ignition of clothing in an electrical contact

• Usually occurs at higher voltages

Page 12: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

12

“Tracking” Arc

Electrical Hazards – Arc Flash

“Tracking” arcs are “arcs” which conduct through skin and “pop out” between skin and clothing.

• Can cause ignition of clothing in an electrical contact

• Usually occurs at higher voltages

Page 13: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Avoiding Mistakes

• Overkill on PPE “sounds” smart but it has two negatives

– Sends the wrong message

– If the workers don’t believe you they may cut corners when no one is watching.

– Watch out for salesmen’s little lies…

– Better safe than sorry??

– Better safe and right

Match PPE to the hazard

Page 14: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

2. “We got ‘dem kits” programs OR“We have coveralls” programs

Page 15: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Avoiding Mistakes

• Making the program cheaper or easier for management or the safety department or for enforcement may not be the most cost effective or the best program.

• A natural program that becomes a worker’s habit is the most reliable.

• Tends to over protect or not protect at all.

• Match the kit to the level

– Don’t buy 100 cal kits for everyone.

• Arc rated daily wear is better than a “coverall program.”

– Darlene’s story

Make the program easy for the worker

Level 2 Kit

Page 16: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

3. The “get-a-Size-12-Class-2-rubber-glove-for-all-arc –exposures”

Program

Page 17: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

She needs smaller gloves

He needs special coveralls/suits

Page 18: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

4. The “Flame Resistant(FR)-labeled-clothing-is-all-I-need-in-the-electric-

arc” delusion.

Page 19: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace SafetyArc Rated or “FR”?

Arc-Rated PPE – Clothing

Vertical Flame Test (ASTM D6413) not good enough alone.

Page 20: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Arc-Rated PPE – Clothing

Beware of:

• “FR until washed or dry cleaned”

• Melting “FR”

• “FR-treated” acrylics, polyester, nylon

Got Arc-Rating?

Because of the misuse of the term FR, NFPA 70E removed the term favoring arc-rated.

Page 21: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety“FR” Melted Onto the Head

Arc-Rated PPE – Clothing

Page 22: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace SafetyRainwear

Arc-Rated PPE – Clothing

Not all FR rainwear is arc rated. Any FR rainwear with a melting substrate will usually increase

worker injury.

Page 23: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

5. “We bought this PowerPoint” Programs

Page 24: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

• Generic training doesn’t always get to the finer points.

• Site specific written programs are critical

• Unique hazards must be considered

– FR cotton and 20% body burns from sodium hypochlorite.

– Aramids and welding spatter.

– Melting polyester in cleanrooms.

• Train + Audit + Knowledgeable Management = A Great Program

Page 25: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

6. The “buy-everyone-an-arc-flash-suit-and-do-calculations-later”

delusion

Page 26: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

• Assessment will not change the level of protection but it will change how often you need to wear it.

• Don’t put off PPE purchases waiting on assessment

• Daily wear for all electrical workers

• Suits for high level exposures

• Operators work in natural fiber or are rated gear depending on level of exposure.

Don’t put off PPE purchase but

Page 27: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

7. Focusing on Arc Flash rather than Shock

Page 28: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

• Shock is the number one killer of the electrical hazards.

• More bang for the buck with right PPE than engineering. Most important engineering is done by proper installations, maintenance then equipment upgrades. Engineering out the arc flash hazard is not always an option.

Page 29: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

8. Ignore specialty Gear

Page 30: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Avoiding Mistakes

• ASTM F1506

– Hairnets/beardnets

– Cleanroom gear

– Gloves (Proposed separate Standard)

– Disposable FR Wear

• ASTM F1891

– Rainwear

– Chemical gear + Chemical Standard

• ASTM D2413 + D1116

– Shoes (EH or DI or leather, etc.)

• Other Specialty PPE must be evaluated by the AHJ

Don’t forget specialty gear

Page 31: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

9. Safety Department Can Do it On Our Own, Safety Myopia:

“The Daisy Chain Delusion”

Page 32: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Avoiding Mistakes

• The five people you need to do proper hazard assessment for electrical

– Trouble making electrician

– Nicest electrician

– Smartest electrician

– Electrical Engineer

– Safety Person

The Electrical Safety Team

Page 33: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Safety-Related Work Practices

Sometimes we only look for what we know…

Daisy chaining power cords is prohibited by OSHA, Sir.

Page 34: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Three Types of Audits Required

Observations required to do the following:

• Identifies:• Demonstrate task

proficiency • Retraining needs• Supervisory level• Part of evaluating

Qualified Persons

Supervisory Safe Work Practice Inspection

NFPA 70E 110.2(D)(1)(f)

Minimum annual supervisory work practice inspection to monitor safe work practices

Page 35: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Three Types of Audits Required

Better practice: Separate from Supervisory Audit.Observations required to do the following:• Prove procedures work• Identify:

• Procedures that don’t work• Changes that should be

made• Retraining needs

Annual Field Work Audit

Site audit looks at the site’s practices and could include NEC auditing and NFPA/OSHA auditing 110.4 (H)(2)

Best practice: Separate from Supervisory Audit.• Year One: Internal by

local safety/electrical dept.

• Year Two: Cross-pollinate using another professional from another plant or industry

• Year Three: Outside Audit by competent auditor

Page 36: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

36

Training, Auditing, & Reporting Effects

Safety-Related Work Practices

Baseline Training Auditing Reporting50

60

70

80

90

100

The Effects of Training, Goal Setting, and Knowledge of Results on Safe Behavior: A Component Analysis, Robert A. Reber and Jerry A. Wallin, The Academy of Management Journal, Vol. 27, No. 3 (Sep., 1984), pp. 544-560

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Page 37: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Avoiding Mistakes

• Documented electrical safety program audit (not more than every 3 yrs.)

NFPA 70 E 110.3 (H)(1)

• Must reviewed Arc Hazard Assessment minimum of every five years.

– Updates required if major modifications or renovations.

– Required for calculations or if Tables used.

– Should include audit of labeling.

Electrical Safety Program Audit & Hazard Assessment Audit

Page 38: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

Safety-Related Work Practices

Habit 1 Always verify absence of voltage & use VR gloves & tools.

Habit 2 Establish worker safety boundaries from shock & arc flash.

Habit 3 Always wear arc-rated daily wear and a face shield.

Habit 4 Always use GFCI with cord connected tools & extension cords.

Habit 5 When feasible create an electrically safe work condition.

Habit 6 Plan your jobs, use standards to identify greater hazards, & adopt controls & PPE to mitigate hazards.

Habit 7 Measure, audit & continuously improve electrical safety processes.

7 Electrical Safety Habits™

Page 39: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Top 10 Mistakes

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

10. Fill in the Blank...

Page 40: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

*Newsletter is free; charge for DVD.

www.e-hazard.com Email: [email protected]

Phone: (502) 716-7073

For a FREE* copy of our newsletter or information about our DVD’s:

Text: “DVD” or “Newsletter” with your e-mail address to:

925-Arc-Wear(925-272-9327)

Questions? Want More Information?

Page 41: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

ElectricalWorkplace Safety

For more information on electrical arc PPE, for help on selecting the proper arc

PPE or for a custom quote, Contact your local

Magid Glove & Safety Sales Representative

1-800-444-8030

Page 42: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

• Hugh HoaglandTechnical Consultant,ArcWear.com and e-Hazard.com

• Bob Vavra

Content Manager and Moderator, Plant Engineering

Speakers

Page 43: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Thanks Today’s Webcast Sponsor

Page 44: Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Driving Electrical Safety in Your Plant

Sponsored by: