This Independent Study course is intended to provide a general introduction to hazardous materials that can serve as a foundation for more specific studies in the future. This course does not meet Hazardous Materials response requirements identified in HAZWOPER standard (29CFR1910.120(q)(6)(i). The course has five Units which are outlined below. No prior knowledge of the subject is required or assumed. At the end of the course, the participant should be able to:
• Explain the roles of Federal, State, Tribal and local governments
in reducing hazardous materials risks through Health and Environmental
Regulations;
• Discuss the two major hazardous materials identification systems
used within the United States;
• Identify possible terrorist’s targets of opportunities
in the use of toxic industrial chemicals (TIC) as Weapons of Mass
Destruction (WMD);
• Identify locations where hazardous materials are commonly
found and how to determine their potential health effects;
• Describe basic terms that pertain to exposures to hazardous
materials;
• Read and interpret a materials safety data sheet (MSDS);
• Explain how hazardous materials enter the body and contaminate
the environment;
• Describe what communities can do to increase their emergency
preparedness to respond to hazardous materials incidents; and
• Identify steps individuals and communities can take to protect
themselves during a hazardous materials release.
The five Units are:
Unit 1: Health and Environmental Regulations. This Unit explains
the roles of Federal, State, Tribal and local governments in reducing
hazardous materials risks, and reviews the key provisions of critical
Federal legislation.
Unit 2: Hazardous Materials Identification Systems. This Unit discusses
the two major hazardous materials identification systems currently
being used in the United States. It also outlines how communities
should be able to recognize a terrorist use of toxic industrial chemicals
as Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD).
Unit 3: Identifying Hazardous Materials. This Unit provides an overview
of locations in which these materials are commonly found and discusses
ways of determining what particular chemicals, with what health effects,
exist in these locations.
Unit 4: Hazardous Materials and Human Health. This Unit introduces
many of the basic terms used to discuss hazardous materials problems,
and explain how hazardous materials enter and move through the body
and the environment.
Unit 5: Preparing for Hazardous Materials Incidents. This Unit explains
what local communities can do to increase their emergency preparedness
to respond to hazardous materials incidents of any size. It also identifies
steps individuals can take to protect themselves during a hazardous
materials release.