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Author Topic: OSHA's Final Rule to Protect Workers from Exposure to Respirable Crystalline Sil  (Read 1933 times)

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Offline Marlin

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   This will affect many of us but those of us in construction/demolition especially. It is sometimes put in the same category as asbestos but is not really controlled as much except as a fugitive dust in construction/demolition. That is what the fog machines or fire hoses are for (among other hazards). This is something I keep an eye on personally. I removed and re-lagged piping with asbestos on my submarine in overhaul in the early 70s before it was regulated. I make sure that every time I get a chest X-Ray they look for asbestosis. As it turns out what they found was silica scarring, I feel no effects and would not have known without the chest X-Ray so it is minor and of no concern at this time.


OSHA's Final Rule to Protect Workers from Exposure to Respirable Crystalline Silica


https://www.osha.gov/silica/

Offline Rerun

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Hmmm interesting

atomicarcheologist

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I've never used a fire hose for silica control, but have utilized garden hoses and bug sprayers. My paperboy math indicates this leaves less water to process.
I'll have to request a chest x-ray on my next annual physical to check for scarring as I gave been in nuke D&D, deconstruction, demolition, and remediation since '76.
« Last Edit: Jul 25, 2016, 10:59 by Atomic Archeologist »

Offline Marlin

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I've never used a fire hose for silica control, but have utilized garden hoses and bug sprayers. My paperboy math indicates this leaves less water to process.
I'll have to request a chest x-ray on my next annual physical to check for scarring as I gave been in nuke D&D, deconstruction, demolition, and remediation since '76.

   A garden hose or bug sprayer would not suppress fugitive dust on a 250,000 to million square foot building being demolished. ;)  I don't see the fire hoses used much any more, the foggers (snow machines) have become more effective and for the reason that you mention.



   Some times a fire hose was the only answer for the demolition of an elevated structure such as a contaminated chimney though drilling holes at the bottom and ventilating I think is better. We put a worker in a manbasket for elevated suppression but there are foggers on booms today.


   For older large facilities the ground below is likely contaminated and will be excavated anyway so if there is no runoff it is not a big deal. The below ground excavation is phase two anyway when you move from RCRA to CERCLA regulations for below grade demolition.

   Silica is frequently the secondary function of air quality control. Radiological asbestos etc. are usually the primary reason. Silica is in a wide variety of materials including the dust that is raised by trucks moving on the ground, if you are on a unpaved site you probably saw water trucks sprinkling the ground. That wasn't to keep dust off the office curtains.  8)


   Silica is 59 percent of the earths crust.  :o

 


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