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A <br /> 3 Frontier Transportation, Inc. <br /> f { Health and Safety Plan <br /> Page 8 <br /> i_ <br /> Decontamination procedures will be developed for both equipment and personnel. A distinction will be made <br /> between personnel equipment and monitoring equipment for purposes of decontamination. <br /> 9.2. 1 STANDARD DECONTAMINATION <br /> All field personnel exiting from the site must pass through a personnel contamination reduction corridor <br /> (CRC). At a minimum, all personnel exiting the site will remove all protective clothing and wash their face and <br /> hands before entering lunch and break areas to eat, drink or smoke. All personnel will perform a field wash (as <br /> defined below) before leaving the site. <br /> A temporary CRC will be established by spreading a waterproof ground sheet and using several tubs for <br /> personnel decontamination. The area will be established by the SSO in discussion with the HSC and BEA Project <br /> Manager. <br /> On-site showering will not be required as part of the routine decontamination procedure. However, a <br /> shower will be taken at the end of the working day after returning from the site to complete the decontamination <br /> process before the next meal or retiring for the day. <br /> Disposal equipment, including respirator cartridges, must be placed in heavy plastic bags or directly into <br /> 55-gallon drums for off-site disposal in an approved manner. Used decontamination solutions will also be stored in <br /> 55-gallon drums. <br /> 9.2.2 EMERGENCY DECONTAMINATION <br /> I <br /> In the event that a seriously injured person is suspected of being contaminated, the SSO or other site worker <br /> will wrap the injured individual in clean plastic sheeting to prevent contamination of the ambulance. Less severely <br /> injured individuals will have their protective clothing carefully cut off before transport to the hospital. <br /> 9.2.3 COVERALLS <br /> If coveralls are sent off-site for cleaning, the cleaner establishment will be notified of any hazards prior to <br /> receiving the coveralls. <br /> 9.3 WATER AVAILABILITY <br /> Potable water will be available on-site. <br /> 9A RECORD KEEPING <br /> To assure HASP implementation, many site activities will be documented. These include maintenance of <br /> the HASP at the site; employee HASP sign-off; daily safety briefings; site sign-in log; emergency medical data <br /> sheets; health and safety log-notes (which include instrument calibration records, sampling data, monitoring results <br /> and incident reports); chemical safety data sheets; and other records identified in the HASP. All documents noted <br /> are subject to audit and review by the Project Health and Safety Coordinator and/or Certified Industrial Hygienist. <br /> 9.5 EMERGENCY RESPONSE PLAN <br /> Emergency response procedures have been developed for extraordinary events that could occur during field <br /> operations. These events include accidents and/or injuries, chemical exposure, spills and fires. <br /> 'ill <br />