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COMPLIANCE INFO_2024
EnvironmentalHealth
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EHD Program Facility Records by Street Name
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1900 - Hazardous Materials Program
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PR0528751
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COMPLIANCE INFO_2024
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Entry Properties
Last modified
11/4/2024 10:13:57 AM
Creation date
10/15/2024 12:10:19 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
1900 - Hazardous Materials Program
File Section
COMPLIANCE INFO
FileName_PostFix
2024
RECORD_ID
PR0528751
PE
1920 - HMBP-Common Materials
FACILITY_ID
FA0019424
FACILITY_NAME
SUSD-CESAR CHAVEZ HIGH SCHOOL
STREET_NUMBER
2929
STREET_NAME
WINDFLOWER
STREET_TYPE
LN
City
STOCKTON
Zip
95212
APN
13004003
CURRENT_STATUS
Active, billable
QC Status
Approved
Scanner
SJGOV\kblackwell
Supplemental fields
Site Address
2929 WINDFLOWER LN STOCKTON 95212
Tags
EHD - Public
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• Four routes by which a hazardous <br />material can enter your body: <br />▪Inhalation <br />▪Absorption <br />▪Ingestion <br />▪Injection <br />Hazard Communication <br />For a chemical to present a hazard to a person's health, it must first come in contact with or <br />enter the body. There are four main routes by which a chemical may enter your body. The <br />four routes of exposure are inhalation, absorption, ingestion, and injection. Inhalation is <br />the most common route for a chemical to enter your body. Absorption is the second‐most <br />common route of exposure, followed by ingestion and then injection. <br />The route of exposure in most instances is dependent on the physical state of a chemical. <br />Since they will accumulate in air, chemicals that are gases, mists, vapors, fumes, or dusts <br />present an inhalation hazard. <br />Regardless of its physical state, if a chemical comes in contact with your skin, the chemical <br />can absorb through your skin and be distributed throughout your body by your <br />bloodstream. There is a potential for chemicals to be ingested if food, hands, or cigarettes <br />are contaminated with chemicals. To avoid accidentally ingesting chemicals, you should not <br />drink, eat, or smoke in areas where chemicals are stored or used. Injection, though less <br />likely, occurs when a sharp object that is contaminated with a chemical punctures the skin <br />and injects a chemical directly into the bloodstream. <br />12
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