All posts by Ralph Stuart

Health and Safety Training for Cannabis Businesses Workshop Description

Presenters: Melissa Wilcox and Julia Bramante
Saturday, August 18, 8:30 – 4 PM

Health and safety training related to cannabis has become an urgent national priority. Recent studies suggest less than fifty percent of cannabis operators provide any health and safety training for their staff, and across all United States industries the number of workers who can use cannabis legally is increasing. This course is intended for employers in states where cannabis use is legal, as well as workers and staff throughout the cannabis industry. The course will cover topics important for individuals who work at cannabis operations.

This comprehensive course presented by the American Chemical Society Chemical Health and Safety Division and the Cannabis Chemistry Subdivision is a review of methodologies, safety considerations and best practices related to working at cannabis operations whether it is a retail, manufacturing, cultivation, laboratory or a vertically integrated combination of those operations. Participants will learn how to comply with health and safety standards at each level of the supply chain. Policies and recommendations will be discussed for the following topics:  workplace safety, laboratory safety, personal protective equipment training, hazardous materials (HAZMAT), and handling law enforcement interactions.

There is extensive opportunity for questions both during the workshop and with follow-up by phone and email. Each participant will receive workshop materials and resources.

EXTRACTION, ANALYSIS, AND LAB SAFETY:

  • Cannabis Extraction and Analysis
  • Hazard identification 
  • Flammables and Explosives
  • Hazard Communication
  • Safety Data Sheets (SDS)
  • Laboratory Ergonomics
  • Laboratory Safety
  • Laboratory Emergency Preparedness

WORKPLACE SAFETY:

  • General Workplace Safety
  • Back Safety
  • Confined Spaces
  • Ergonomics (in Industrial and/or Office settings)
  • Fall Prevention – Slips, Trips, and Falls
  • Food Security Awareness
  • Hand, Wrist, and Finger Safety
  • Identifying Workplace Hazards
  • Safety Audits
  • Hazard Emergency Response Plan
  • Incident Reporting/Investigation OSHA Recordkeeping (for Employees and/or Supervisors and Managers)
  • PPE Training:
  • General PPE Essentials
  • Hand and Foot Protection
  • Head, Eye, and Face Protection
  • Hearing and Respiratory Protection

LAW ENFORCEMENT INTERACTIONS:

  • State and Federal Cannabis Laws
  • Knowing Your Rights
  • Preparing and Responding to Raids and Arrests

HAZARDOUS MATERIALS (HAZMAT):

  • Globally Harmonized System for the Classification and Labeling of Chemicals (GHS)
  • Hazard Communications (for when working with hazardous chemicals)
  • Hazmat: Awareness, labeling, loading/unloading, marking, packaging, reporting, etc.
  • Hazmat Emergency Response Training
  • Hazmat: Security Awareness and Safety

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Registration Notes:
One person may register for multiple workshops on a single Registration form. If you have more than one person to register using the same credit card or billing method or if you need help with the registration process, please contact Russ Phifer at 610-322-0657 or rphifer@wcenvironmental.com

You will receive a confirmation that your registration has been submitted immediately upon registering. You will be sent a confirmation of registration email as soon as your registration is reviewed. Please contact 610-322-0657 if you do not receive the confirmation within four working days.

Terms
Members of ACS who are not also members of CHAS do not qualify for the CHAS member discount.

Conditions and Cancellation/Refund Policy
Upon verified registration, information will be sent to each participant containing specific location information of the workshop. Companies may substitute registrants without prior notice or penalty. Full refund available for cancellations up to three (3) weeks prior to workshop date. 50% refund up to one (1) week prior to workshop. Cancellations made less than seven (7) days prior to workshop start date will be charged, but an 80% credit may be applied toward a future program. No-shows receive no credit and will be billed. In the event that the Division of Chemical Health and Safety is forced to cancel a workshop due to lack of registration or other causes, CHAS will notify participants at least ten (10) days in advance by email. We will notify you by email as soon as we know that the workshops will be held, i.e. we have sufficient registrants to present the workshop. CHAS suggests fully refundable air fares be used due to the potential of workshop cancellation. CHAS will not be responsible for penalties caused by these types of fares in the event of workshop cancellation.

Laboratory Safety – Beyond the Fundamentals Workshop Description

taught by Jim KaufmanLab Safety Institute
Friday, August 17, 8:30 – 4 PM

Description: The Laboratory Safety Institute (LSI) will present a new course at the ACS national meetings. The course meets the needs of scientists, science educators, lab workers and their supervisors wanting to learn more about laboratory safety. “Lab Safety – Beyond the Fundamentals” continues where LSI’s introductory course (The Laboratory Safety Workshop) leaves off and explores new areas in lab safety. There is an emphasis on simple and inexpensive steps to create more effective lab safety programs and grow the culture of lab safety.

There is extensive opportunity for questions both during the workshop with follow-up by phone and email. This includes a one-hour conference call to help with the implementation of course concepts. Course participants are encouraged to submit in advance five questions/topics they wish to be sure are covered in the course: jim@labsafetyinstitute.org. Each participant will receive workshop materials (280-Page, three-ring Lab safety course notebook) and other photocopied resources.

Specific Items Covered include:

  • Evaluating your Lab Safety Program
  • Fire Control
  • Lab Safety Equipment
  • Labeling
  • Chemical Handling (part II)
  • Compressed Gases
  • Laboratory Ventilation
  • Recordkeeping
  • Handling Lab Glassware
  • BREAK
  • Conducting Laboratory Inspections
  • Employee/Student Involvement
  • Safety Program Planning
  • Safety Information Resources
  • LAB SAFETY FORUM:
    Informal Roundtable Discussions for Interested Participants

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Registration Notes:
One person may register for multiple workshops on a single Registration form. If you have more than one person to register using the same credit card or billing method or if you need help with the registration process, please contact Russ Phifer at 610-322-0657 or rphifer@wcenvironmental.com

You will receive a confirmation that your registration has been submitted immediately upon registering. You will be sent a confirmation of registration email as soon as your registration is reviewed. Please contact 610-322-0657 if you do not receive the confirmation within four working days.

Terms
Members of ACS who are not also members of CHAS do not qualify for the CHAS member discount.

Conditions and Cancellation/Refund Policy
Upon verified registration, information will be sent to each participant containing specific location information of the workshop. Companies may substitute registrants without prior notice or penalty. Full refund available for cancellations up to three (3) weeks prior to workshop date. 50% refund up to one (1) week prior to workshop. Cancellations made less than seven (7) days prior to workshop start date will be charged, but an 80% credit may be applied toward a future program. No-shows receive no credit and will be billed. In the event that the Division of Chemical Health and Safety is forced to cancel a workshop due to lack of registration or other causes, CHAS will notify participants at least ten (10) days in advance by email. We will notify you by email as soon as we know that the workshops will be held, i.e. we have sufficient registrants to present the workshop. CHAS suggests fully refundable air fares be used due to the potential of workshop cancellation. CHAS will not be responsible for penalties caused by these types of fares in the event of workshop cancellation.

Laboratory Waste Management Workshop Description

Taught by Russ Phifer, WC Enviromental
Friday, August 17, 8:30 – 4 PM

Description: CHAS offers the Laboratory Waste Management workshop to assist participants with the various regulatory requirements that apply to laboratories which generate hazardous waste, as well as to provide insight into the options for on-site management and off-site disposal. Includes details on the new Hazardous Waste Improvement Rule. Focus will include discussion on recycling/reclamation techniques, economical handling of wastes and liability issues. There is extensive opportunity for questions both during the workshop with follow-up by phone and email.

Specific topics includes:

  • Environmental Controls
  • Laws/ Regulations
  • Clarifications/ Interpretations
  • Internal Policies
  • Hazardous Waste Regulations as they apply to Laboratories
  • Waste Determinations
  • Waste Lists / Waste Characteristics
  • Acute Wastes
  • Mixtures
  • Empty Containers
  • Satellite Storage
  • Academic Lab Waste Rule
  • Other Regulatory Requirements & Issues
  • Liability – Superfund/CERCLA
  • Personal vs. institutional liability
  • Down the drain / in the trash
  • Compatibility
  • Waste Minimization
  • Recycling / Reclamation
  • Part of process treatment
  • Onsite Handling of Lab Wastes
  • Storage
  • Consolidation
  • Working with Vendors
  • Vendor selection
  • Contracting
  • Transportation / brokers / packagers
  • Economics

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Registration Notes:
One person may register for multiple workshops on a single Registration form. If you have more than one person to register using the same credit card or billing method or if you need help with the registration process, please contact Russ Phifer at 610-322-0657 or rphifer@wcenvironmental.com

You will receive a confirmation that your registration has been submitted immediately upon registering. You will be sent a confirmation of registration email as soon as your registration is reviewed. Please contact 610-322-0657 if you do not receive the confirmation within four working days.

Terms
Members of ACS who are not also members of CHAS do not qualify for the CHAS member discount.

Conditions and Cancellation/Refund Policy
Upon verified registration, information will be sent to each participant containing specific location information of the workshop. Companies may substitute registrants without prior notice or penalty. Full refund available for cancellations up to three (3) weeks prior to workshop date. 50% refund up to one (1) week prior to workshop. Cancellations made less than seven (7) days prior to workshop start date will be charged, but an 80% credit may be applied toward a future program. No-shows receive no credit and will be billed. In the event that the Division of Chemical Health and Safety is forced to cancel a workshop due to lack of registration or other causes, CHAS will notify participants at least ten (10) days in advance by email. We will notify you by email as soon as we know that the workshops will be held, i.e. we have sufficient registrants to present the workshop. CHAS suggests fully refundable air fares be used due to the potential of workshop cancellation. CHAS will not be responsible for penalties caused by these types of fares in the event of workshop cancellation.

 

JCHAS Editor’s Spotlight: Chemical suicides: Hazards and how to manage them

The Editor’s Spotlight for the March / April 2018 issue of the Journal of Chemical Health and Safety is shining on:

Chemical suicides: Hazards and how to manage them by
Michael Logan and Christina  Baxter

Michael Logan is affiliated with Research and Scientific Branch, Queensland Fire and Emergency Services, GPO BOX 1425, Brisbane, Queensland 4001, Australia.

Christina Baxter is affiliated with Emergency Response TIPS, LLC, Woodbridge, Virginia 22191, USA.

The abstract for this article is:

Emergency response to chemical suicides has become more common place in recent years. In order to address the operational implications of these events, it is first important to understand the methodologies which are commonly used, the locations where the events often occur, the concentrations of material generated, and how those concentration relates to exposure standards and flammability. Using hydrogen sulfide, carbon monoxide, hydrogen cyanide, and phosphine as examples, guidance is offered about risk control measures including personal protective equipment and decontamination strategies to effectively and safely mitigate the incidents.

This article and the rest of the issue can be found at ScienceDirect site

Also included in this issue of JCHAS are:

Expanding our Boarders: Safety at ABCChem 2018

Anatomy of an incident—Multiple failure of safety systems under stress
Hugo Schmidt

Make safety a habit!
Robert H. Hill

The state of the arts: Chemical safety — 1937 to 2017
Monona Rossol

Contamination control monitoring at the Los Alamos National Laboratory’s Plutonium Facility
Michael E. Cournoyer

Safety as an ACS Core Value

In December, 2016, the American Chemical Society’s Board of Directors adopted “Professionalism, Safety and Ethics” as a core value of the Society in its Strategic Plan.

In order to make this commitment more concrete, ACS’s 2018 President, Dr. Peter Dorhout (his twitter feed can be found here) convened an ACS “Safety Summit” in February, 2018. The report on the ACS Safety Summit can be downloaded here.C&EN’s report on the summit can be found here.

Ralph Stuart, the chair of the ACS Committee on Chemical Safety reported to the Committee on the summit and how the Society is planning on incorporating safety into its overall strategy to support its members, educators, decision-makers and the public. His presentation to the committee can be downloaded here.

Please feel free to share any questions and comments on this work with either Peter or Ralph.

March, 2018 Webinar Follow-up

In the 21st century, chemistry research is more varied and expansive than ever before, the rules that keep one lab safe will not adequately address the possible risks in others. Rather than having a universal set of rules, a more adaptive system is needed for both academic and industry labs. Ralph Stuart, Chemical Hygiene Officer at Keene State College, and Samuella Sigmann, Senior Lecturer at Appalachian State University, propose a new way of thinking that builds a dynamic safety system based on your own needs and conditions as well as provides resources on how such programs can be developed.

You can download a PDF of the presentation here.

The webinar was attended by over 850 people, who asked many more interesting questions than we were able to answer during the webinar. We built a web page to answer questions we didn’t get to and  provide our initial answers. Some of these questions have many possible answers. Let us know if you have comments or questions on what we’ve said or ask an additional question on the web page.

In case you’re curious, you can see what some of the comments from those who attended in the 2018-03-08 Safety Webinar Speaker Feedback infographic.

 

JCHAS Editor’s Spotlight: A methodology on how to create a real-life relevant risk profile for a given nanomaterial

The Editor’s Spotlight for the January / February 2018 issue of the Journal of Chemical Health and Safety is shining on:

A methodology on how to create a real-life relevant risk profile for a given nanomaterial
by Christa Schimpel, Susanne Resch,  Guillaume Flament,  David Carlander, and Izaskun Bustero

The abstract for this Open access article is:

With large amounts of nanotoxicology studies delivering contradicting results and a complex, moving regulatory framework, potential risks surrounding nanotechnology appear complex and confusing. Many researchers and workers in different sectors are dealing with nanomaterials on a day-to-day basis, and have a requirement to define their assessment/management needs.

This paper describes an industry-tailored strategy for risk assessment of nanomaterials and nano-enabled products, which builds on recent research outcomes. The approach focuses on the creation of a risk profile for a given nanomaterial (e.g., determine which materials and/or process operation pose greater risk, where these risks occur in the lifecycle, and the impact of these risks on society), using state-of-the-art safety assessment approaches/tools (ECETOC TRA, Stoffenmanager Nano and ISO/TS 12901-2:2014).

The developed nanosafety strategy takes into account cross-sectoral industrial needs and includes:

  • (i) Information Gathering: Identification of nanomaterials and hazards by a demand-driven questionnaire and on-site company visits in the context of human and ecosystem exposures, considering all companies/parties/downstream users involved along the value chain;
  • (ii) Hazard Assessment: Collection of all relevant and available information on the intrinsic properties of the substance (e.g., peer reviewed (eco)toxicological data, material safety data sheets), as well as identification of actual recommendations and benchmark limits for the different nano-objects in the scope of this projects;
  • (iii) Exposure Assessment: Definition of industry-specific and application-specific exposure scenarios taking into account operational conditions and risk management measures;
  • (iv) Risk Characterisation: Classification of the risk potential by making use of exposure estimation models (i.e., comparing estimated exposure levels with threshold levels);
  • (v) Refined Risk Characterisation and Exposure Monitoring: Selection of individual exposure scenarios for exposure monitoring following the OECD Harmonized Tiered Approach to refine risk assessment;
  • (vi) Risk Mitigation Strategies: Development of risk mitigation actions focusing on risk prevention.

This article and the rest of the issue can be found at ScienceDirect site

Also included in this issue of JCHAS are:

Don’t ever tell me…
Harry J. Elston

Photocatalytic degradation of phenol solution using Zinc Oxide/UV
Original research article
H. Dewidar, S.A. Nosier, A.H. El-Shazly

A methodology on how to create a real-life relevant risk profile for a given nanomaterial
Open access – Original research article
Christa Schimpel, Susanne Resch,  Guillaume Flament,  David Carlander, and Izaskun Bustero

A case history of legacy chemical cleanup in the lab
Original research article
L.C. Cadwallader, R.J. Pawelko

Development of custom calibration factors for respirable silica using standard methods compared to photometric monitoring data
Pages 27-35
Leon F. Pahler, Danielle D. McKenzie-Smith, Rodney G. Handy, Darrah K. Sleeth

Engineering intervention to reduce API dust exposure during milling operation
Original research article
Vivek Kanjiyangat, Manikandan Hareendran

UPCOMING EVENTS

Safety Presentations from the Atlantic Basin Conference on Chemistry

ACS Safety Initiatives: Impact On The Global Chemistry Enterprise
Neal Langerman

US safety initiatives as influences on global laboratory safety
Russ Phifer

Approaching research and scale-up safety through process-oriented solutions
Harry J. Elston, Ph.D., CIH

Social and Ethical Implications (SEI) of Nanotechnology
Larry Gibbs, CIH, FAIHA

Analyzing academic laboratory accidents to prevent accidents
Craig Merlic

Risk Perception in Academic Laboratories
Imke Schroeder, Ph.D.

Volunteer Opportunities in DCHAS

INFORMATION FOR NEW CHAS MEMBERS AND VOLUNTEERS

Safety and the American Chemical Society (ACS)

The ACS is a very large organization managed by a combination of full-time professionals and active volunteers.  Information regarding how the ACS operates can be found on the ACS website (https://www.acs.org/content/acs/en/about/governance.html) and is not discussed in detail in this document.  With respect to safety, the ACS has two groups dedicated to supporting the safe use of chemistry (particularly, but not exclusively, in the laboratory setting) the Committee on Chemical Safety (the CCS) and the Division of Chemical Health and Safety (DCHAS).

The CCS is part of the ACS governance structure and provides policy recommendations for and peer review of ACS safety outreach materials. Membership is managed by the ACS Committee on Committees.

DCHAS is a technical division which addresses emerging chemical safety issues, broadly construed, and supports research into these issues. Membership in the Division is open to all chemists and chemical safety professionals and DCHAS takes the lead in organizing technical symposia and publishing research on the topics. There is significant overlap between CCS and DCHAS, both in terms of professional interests and people participating in the activities of each. The goal of this document is to help people interested in participating in ACS safety discussions identify the best place to develop these interests.

ACS National Meetings

There are two ACS National Meetings scheduled every year, one in the spring (March or April) and one in the fall (August or September). The official dates for each meeting extend from Sunday through the following Thursday. Note that many meeting attendees arrive during the week before the meeting as there are meetings of many governance committees, the ACS Board of Directors meeting, and workshops conducted prior to the official start of the meeting.

CHAS workshops are normally offered on the Friday and Saturday just prior to each National Meeting. ACS staff usually arrive by the Wednesday before the meeting.  The CCS usually holds a working meeting on Saturday Evening which is limited to members of the committee.

The busiest days of the meeting are Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday. Sunday has many presidential symposia and keynote speakers and the exposition opens on Sunday evening. Monday probably has the most symposia of any day at the meeting and features the exposition during the day, and SciMix in the evening (SciMix is a large poster session for all divisions and social event in the convention center). Tuesday is the last day of the exposition and another full day of symposia. On Tuesday evenings there is the ACS Awards Dinner during the Spring Meeting and the ChemLuminary Awards during the Fall Meeting.  The Spring Awards Dinner recognizes individuals while the Fall ChemLuminary Awards event recognizes technical divisions and local sections.

On Wednesday morning of national meetings, the ACS Council Meeting takes place from 8:00 AM until noon. There are about 532 councilors (2015 count) and perhaps another 100-150 others (ACS staff, certain committee members, and non-councilor ACS members) who attend the meeting. Although this is, at best, 5% of the meeting attendees, the meeting activities decrease dramatically starting Wednesday morning. There is no exposition. The number of receptions and other evening events is very small on Wednesday, as a lot of attendees go home on Wednesday. There are symposia scheduled on Thursday morning and afternoon; attendance is often very low, especially in the afternoon symposia. The shuttle bus schedule is less frequent. There are no social activities or events. The symposia that are scheduled on Thursday are mostly from the large divisions.

Technical Programming at the National Meetings is organized by the technical divisions.   Technical divisions develop symposia ideas and identify symposium organizers about 1 year prior to each national meeting.  A “Call for Papers” goes out in C&E News approximately 9 months before the meeting and the online abstracts submission process opens to submissions approximately 8 months prior to the meeting and is open for about 2 months.  After the abstracts submission window closes, Symposium organizers, Division Programming Chairs and ACS staff complete the scheduling process and develop a preliminary and final schedule.

Divisions must follow what is called “even programming.” Each of the five meeting days has morning and afternoon session scheduling, a total of 10 sessions. A division cannot schedule a second symposium in the same session unless they have scheduled symposia for all 10 sessions. Thus, larger divisions must program on Wednesday and Thursday before they can start scheduling second symposia in the same session. They cannot schedule a third symposium in a session until they have scheduled two symposia in all 10 sessions. Take a look at how many simultaneous symposia there are in ANAL, INOR, ORGN, PHYS, or PMSE.

CHAS Activities at National Meetings

The CHAS technical program is reflected in the ACS technical program (available at www.ACS.org) and a 2-page summary trifold is made available on http://www.dchas.org approximately one week prior to the meeting.   This trifold, titled “CHAS-at-a-glance” provides information regarding the workshops, technical symposia and social events for the meeting.  Paper copies are made available at the CHAS Booth in the Exhibit Hall and CHAS technical session information table.  The following are highlights of typical events at the National Meetings for CHAS and CCS.  These are also summarized in a calendar at the end of this document.

CHAS usually offers between two and six workshops at every national meeting. Those workshops take place on the Friday and Saturday before the meeting. Interested persons can obtain information and sign up through the www.dchas.org website.  Members of CHAS and partner groups (CSHEMA, CHED) can attend these workshops for a discounted rate

On Sunday, the CHAS Executive Committee meeting and breakfast takes place from 8:00 a.m. until noon. All members, especially those interested in becoming more active in the division are welcome to attend the DCHAS EC meeting. The meeting agenda is posted on www.dchas.org approximately one week prior to the meeting.  As there are many other Sunday morning activities, it is not unusual to see people coming and going throughout the meeting.

The CHAS technical program usually begins on Sunday afternoon.  The CHAS Program Committee tries to avoid scheduling any technical symposia on Monday morning to avoid a conflict with the CCS membership meeting, but sometimes the “even programming” rules force CHAS to have a session on Monday morning. At a minimum, there are usually CHAS symposia scheduled for Monday afternoon and all-day Tuesday, although lately we have programmed through Wednesday afternoon.  Almost all CHAS symposia are co-sponsored by CCS.

Keeping in mind that many CHAS volunteers are also active on the Committee for Chemical Safety (CCS), we note that the CCS Full Committee Meeting is on Monday morning at 8:30 AM with breakfast starting at 7:45 AM and runs until noon at the latest. If there are working task forces or other CCS working groups who need to do some specific work, CCS may have a working lunch after the full committee meeting.  In light of this overlap, CHAS avoids programming at the same time as this meeting where possible.

Monday and Tuesday are full days of the Exposition in the convention center. CHAS and CCS co-sponsor a booth in the exposition; volunteers from both groups staff the booth (see “Booth Sign-up POLL” below for how to sign-up).

At most national meetings, Monday evening is the CHAS reception and social, usually from 5:00 or 5:30 until 7:00 or 7:30 PM. CCS members are welcome at the CHAS reception and all other activities. CHAS may partner with another division, most frequently SCHB (Small Chemical Business) or CHAL (Chemistry and the Law), as co-hosts of the social event. A co-hosted social may occur on Tuesday evening if our partner has a specific reason to hold it then, such as honoring a keynote speaker or award recipient from a Tuesday symposium.

On Monday night, SciMix is held from 8-10 pm.  CHAS usually has 8-10 posters in the massive SciMix poster session. All members are invited to submit a poster to this event; to do so, submit an abstract as part of the technical program.  The division always tries to have some presence at the ACS Sci-Mix, but has recently experimented with “daytime” poster sessions that is scheduled and collocated with the technical talks.  When the poster session is scheduled with the technical sessions, poster presenters will be invited to re-post their poster during the SciMix sessions as well.

The schedules for the national meeting and for CHAS/CCS are quite full, especially during the key days of Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, when meeting attendance is the greatest.

CHAS activities outside of the National Meetings

The CHAS Executive Committee is active throughout the year, engaged in planning for the next meeting or pursuing projects to improve chemical health and safety throughout the chemical enterprise.   Business is primarily conducted via monthly teleconference meetings that are organized by the chair.  Elected officials, chairs and those working on CHAS projects (‘the executive committee’) are invited to participate in the monthly teleconference. Members interested in becoming more active in the division may also participate (contact someone on the EC to obtain current schedule/details).

In addition to the monthly EC teleconferences, additional teleconferences, and occasionally in-person meetings, are held to coordinate specific activities and projects. These projects are typically coordinated by the committee chair or project leader.  Also- every January, the division sends a few newly elected officers or appointed committee chairs to the ACS Leadership Institute in Dallas.  Attendees are selected by the EC based on their position or involvement with the committee.  Periodically (5-10years), the division will conduct a strategic planning activity to develop long term plans which usually involves the executive committee and active volunteers.

General Information

A variety of resources are available for members and volunteers, each with specific intent

  • DCHAS-L: This is the listserv that is provided to all CHAS members and some ACS and CCS officials. In addition to the latest chemical related incidents captured from Google, It is used as a forum to ask relevant safety based questions to leading subject experts, discuss safety concerns, post lessons-learned, post EHS employment opportunities, and announce CHAS activities to the entire division.  The traffic level of this list is limited to 15 messages/day, but usually is 20 to 30 messages/week.
  • DCHAS-EC: This is a listserv limited to the executive committee for conducting official CHAS business. All officers and chairs are automatically included in this discussion list as well as active volunteers. The traffic level of this list is less than DCHAS-L.
  • dchas.org: This is the official website of the committee and is open to the public.  It contains information for existing and prospective members (including presentations from National Meetings) as well as periodic updates of CHAS business including annual reports and tax filings, EC agendas and CHAS at a Glance
  • CHAS Administrative Manual: This is the operational guide that defines how CHAS business is conducted.  It is available on the CHAS website and is treated as a living document to address the evolving needs of the committee.
  • Basecamp: This is a document sharing program that is utilized as a workspace for specific projects (for example, strategic planning).  Various pages are set up for specific projects with access granted by project.
  • Booth Sign-up and other polls: Individual polls are created usually via online polling apps and sent out to the entire DCHAS-L group prior to national meetings to request volunteers for the booth or other special activity at the National Meeting. Polling apps are also used to schedule special teleconferences.
  • The Journal of Chemical Health and Safety is a benefit to all members as part of their annual dues. Members will receive the paper copy and have access to the electronic copy (current instructions for accessing the electronic copy can be found on dchas.org).  All CHAS members are encouraged to submit articles to the Journal!
  • The Cannabis Chemistry Subdivision (CANN) of CHAS develops programming and other activities focused on the emerging cannabis industry and endeavors to provide to information and other resources to chemists working in this area and ensure their health and safety. CANN business meetings are held Sunday morning after the CHAS-EC meeting, and programming is often scheduled on Monday of the national meeting.

Volunteers

  • The Division of Chemical Health and Safety is reliant on volunteers for its survival – there are no permanent staff that serve the Division, although Divisional activities are often coordinated with ACS staff efforts.  Volunteers can contribute by participating in specific projects or on committees, participation in technical programming as an organizer or presenter, or can assume assigned roles as a chair of one of the various committees or through service in an elected role (usually a 3-year commitment).
  • Getting involved is easy– show up, either in person at a National Meeting or electronically via e-mail!   One of the easiest ways to get involved is to attend the CHAS EC Breakfast on Sunday morning, a technical session or social event at the national meeting-  walk up to a person wearing a “CHAS” shirt and ask how you can get involved (or tell us what you want to do).  The incoming chair of the division is responsible for appointed chairs for the next calendar year, so this is a good person to start with (look this person up on the dchas.org website).
  • Where to start: New volunteers typically start small- show up to a few events and listen in to how the activities work.  You could also present a poster or give a talk, or sign up to volunteer at the booth with an experienced CHAS member.  As you gain experience, you might decide to organize/co-chair a session or participate on a committee (just contact the committee chair and ask where they need help!).  Heck, you might even want to run for an elected position.  In any case- start early and talk to us…we’re not going to let anyone fail at this!

Volunteer Support:

  • How do I get one of those cool shirts? CHAS Shirts are available at Land’s End (https://business.landsend.com/store/chas/) for purchase.
  • Reimbursements for CHAS volunteer activities: Material support and expenses for sanctioned division activities are reimbursed by the division (supplies for workshops, costs for awards, etc.).  Volunteers that serve in elected or appointed roles are provided some financial support (based on role) for their participation in national meetings or other official activities.  The treasurer can provide guidance on how to claim expenses and what roles are supported so just ask!

More Information:

We realize that this guide is not comprehensive, so if there is anything else that you would like to know or see added to this document- please contact us  and a member of the executive committee will help out.  Thanks for taking the time to read this.  We look forward to working with you in the future

  • Original version issued January 2018 by Joe Pickel

Typical National Meeting Events for CHAS & CCS

Friday and Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday
Morning CHAS Workshops

[Registration Required]

CHAS

Breakfast and EC Meeting [OPEN]

 

CCS Breakfast and Open Meeting [OPEN]

 

CHAS

Programming

 

Expo Booth manned

 

 

CHAS

Programming

 

Expo Booth manned

CHAS

Programming

 

 

Afternoon CHAS Workshops

[Registration Required]

 

CHAS

Programming

 

Expo Booth Set-up and opening session

 

CHAS

Programming

 

Expo Booth manned

 

CHAS

Programming

 

Expo Booth closing session and tear-down

 

CHAS

Programming

 

 

Evening (Saturday) CCS Dinner & Subcommittee Meeting [CCS Members]

 

CHAS Reception & Social [OPEN]

 

ACS Sci Mix and CHAS Poster Session