Chapter 29 Hazmat Regulations, Standards, and Laws Flashcards

1
Q

An organization, office, or individual responsible for enforcing the requirements of a code or standard, or for approving equipment, materials, an installation, or a procedure.

A

Authority having jurisdiction (AHJ)

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2
Q

Personnel who, in the course of their normal duties, could encounter an emergency involving hazardous materials/weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and who are expected to recognize the presence of the hazardous materials/WMD, protect themselves, call for trained personnel, and secure the scene.

A

Awareness level personnel

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3
Q

A collection of permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the executive departments and agencies of the U.S. federal government. Its 50 titles represent broad areas of interest that are governed by federal regulation. Each volume of the CFR is updated annually and listed on a quarterly basis.

A

Code of Federal Regulations (CFR)

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4
Q

The U.S. government agency that publicizes and enforces rules and regulations that relate to the transportation of many hazardous materials.

A

Department of Transportation (DOT)

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5
Q

Legislation that requires a business that handles chemicals to report on those chemicals’ type, quantity, and storage method to the fire department and the local emergency planning committee.

A

Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act (EPCRA)

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6
Q

Established in 1970, the U.S. federal agency that ensures safe manufacturing, use, transportation, and disposal of hazardous substances.

A

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

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7
Q

Matter (solid, liquid, or gas) or energy that when released is capable of creating harm to people, the environment, and property, including weapons of mass destruction (WMD) as defined in 18 U.S. Code, Section 2332a, as well as any other criminal use of hazardous materials, such as illicit labs, environmental crimes, or industrial sabotage.

A

Hazardous material

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8
Q

The federal OSHA regulation that governs hazardous materials waste site and response training. Specifics to emergency response can be found in 29 CFR 1910.120(q).

A

HAZWOPER (HAZardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response)

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9
Q

The individual responsible for all incident activities, including the development of strategies and tactics and the ordering and the release of resources.

A

Incident commander (IC)

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10
Q

A committee comprising members of industry, transportation, the public at large, media, and fire and police agencies that gathers and disseminates information on hazardous materials stored in the community and ensures that there are adequate local resources to respond to respond to a chemical event in the community.

A

Local emergency planning committee (LEPC)

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11
Q

The association that develops and maintains nationally recognized minimum consensus standards on many areas of fire safety and specific standards on hazardous materials.

A

National Fire Protection Association (NFPA)

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12
Q

The U.S. federal agency that regulates worker safety and, in some cases, responder safety. OSHA is a part of the U.S. Department of Labor.

A

Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)

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13
Q

Persons who respond to hazardous materials/weapons of mass destruction (WMD) incidents for the purpose of implementing or supporting actions to protect nearby persons, the environment, or property from the effects of the release.

A

Operations level responders

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14
Q

Mandates issued and enforced by governmental bodies such as the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

A

Regulations

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15
Q

(OSHA/HAZWOPER only) A hazardous materials specialist who responds with, and provides support to, hazardous materials technicians. This individual’s duties parallel those of the hazardous materials technicians. This individual’s duties parallel those of the hazardous materials technician; however, the technician’s duties require a more directed or specific knowledge of the various substances he or she may be called upon to contain. The hazardous materials __________ also act as the incident-site liaison with federal, state, local, and other government authorities regarding site activities.

A

Specialist level

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16
Q

Documents, the main text of which contain only requirements and which are in a form generally suitable for mandatory reference by another standard or code or for adoption into law. Nonmandatory provisions shall be located in an appendix or annex, footnote, or fine-print note and are to be considered a part of the requirements of a standard.

A

Standards

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17
Q

The liaison between local and state levels that collects and disseminates information relating to hazardous materials emergencies. ____ includes representatives from agencies such as the fire service, police services, and elected officials.

A

State Emergency Response Commission (SERC)

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18
Q

One of the first U.S. laws to affect how fire departments respond in a hazardous materials emergency.

A

Superfund Amendments and Reauthorized Act of 1986 (SARA)

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19
Q

Any occupancy types or facilities that present a high potential for loss of life or serious impact to the community resulting from fire, explosion, or chemical release.

A

Target hazards

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20
Q

A person who responds to hazardous materials/WMD incidents using a risk-based response process by which he or she analyzes a problem involving hazardous materials/WMD, selects applicable decontamination procedures, and controls a release using specialized protective clothing and control equipment.

A

Technician level

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21
Q

A material that poses an unreasonable risk to the health and safety of the public and/or the
environment if it is not controlled properly during handling, processing, and disposal is called a

A. hazardous waste.
B. hazardous material.
C. hazardous target.
D. hazardous substance.

A

B. hazardous material.

22
Q

Which of the following is a nongovernment agency that issues fire response standards?

A. CANUTEC
B. NFPA
C. OSHA
D. EPA

A

B. NFPA

23
Q

In the United States, the federal document containing the hazardous materials response
competencies is known as

A. NFPA.
B. EPCRA.
C. SARA.
D. HAZWOPER.

A

D. HAZWOPER

24
Q

ln the United States, which federal government agency enforces and publicizes laws and regulations
that govern the transportation of goods by highways, rail, and air?

A. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
B. Occupational Safety and Health Agency (OSHA)
C. State Emergency Response Commission (SERC)
D. Department of Transportation (DOT)

A

D. Department of Transportation (DOT)

25
Q

What act requires a business that handles chemicals to report storage type, quantity, and storage
methods to the fire department and the local emergency planning committee?

A. Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act
B. Local Emergency Planning Committee Act
C. Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act
D. Occupational Safety and Health Act

A

C. Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act

26
Q

Which of the following is a group that gathers information about hazardous materials and
disseminates that information to the public?

A. LEPC
B. NFPA
C. SARA
D. EPA

A

A. LEPC

27
Q

Which of the following is a state group that acts as a liaison between local- and state-level response
authorities?

A. SARA
B. EPA
C. SERC
D. MSDS

A

C. SERC

28
Q

Which response level is trained to recognize a hazardous materials emergency and call for assistance?

A. Awareness
B. Operations
C. Technician
D. Specialist

A

A. Awareness

29
Q

Which response level is trained to take defensive actions?

A. Awareness
B. Operations
C. Technician
D. Specialist

A

B. Operations

30
Q

Which response level is trained to take offensive actions?

A. Awareness
B. Operations
C. Technician
D. Specialist

A

C. Technician

31
Q

The _______ regulates and governs issues relating to hazardous materials in the environment.

A

Environmental Protection Agency

32
Q

A(n) _______ is a detailed profile of a single chemical or mixture or chemicals, provided by the manufacturer
and/or supplier of a chemical.

A

material safety data sheet

33
Q

Hazardous materials incidents are _______ complicated than most structural firefighting incidents.

A

more

34
Q

_______ activities enable agencies to develop logical and appropriate response procedures for anticipated
incidents.

A

Preplanning

35
Q

Awareness level skills are _______ and not defensive.

A

protective

36
Q

Hazardous materials ________ assume command of a hazardous materials incident beyond the
operations level.

A

technicians

37
Q

_______ is the Standard for Competence of Responders to Hazardous Materials/Weapons of Mass Destruction Incidents.

A

NFPA 472

38
Q

The federal document containing the hazardous materials response competencies is known as _______.

A

HAZWOPER

39
Q

______ is the material that remains after a manufacturing plant has used some chemicals, and they are no longer pure.

A

Hazardous waste

40
Q

States that have adopted OSHA safety and health regulations are called ______ states.

A

state-plan

41
Q

True/False

The ability to recognize a potential hazardous materials incident is critical to ensuring one’s safety.

A

True

42
Q

True/False

The Emergency Planning and Community Right to Know Act was one of the first laws to affect how fire
departments respond in a hazardous materials emergency.

A

False

43
Q

True/False

Each state has a State Emergency Response Commission (SERC) that acts as a liaison between local and state levels or authority.

A

True

44
Q

True/False

The actions taken at hazardous materials incidents are largely dictated by the chemicals involved.

A

True

45
Q

True/False

Fires require a less straightforward response than do hazardous materials incidents.

A

False

46
Q

True/False

When approaching a hazardous materials event, you should make a conscious effort to change your response perspective.

A

True

47
Q

True/False

Response agencies should not preplan target hazards owing to the health issues involved in such planning.

A

False

48
Q

True/False

The goal of a fire fighter is to favorably change the outcome of a hazardous materials incident.

A

True

49
Q

True/False

The SARA regulates and governs issues relating to hazardous materials and the environment.

A

False

50
Q

True/False

The EPA’s version of HAZWOPER is in Title 40, Protection of the Environment, Part 311, Worker Safety

A

True