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The Annual Utah Conference on Safety and Industrial Hygiene is designed to provide a forum for the exchange of information and ideas related to oc-cupational and environmental health and safety issues that affect the work-place, general environment and community. General and concurrent safety and industrial hygiene sessions focus on current safety, industrial hygiene and environmental issues as well as technical updates and information on more effective interaction in the workplace. One-day of selected short courses precedes the two-day general and concurrent session conference.
ABOUT the Conference
Conference Cost
Pre-registration: $150On-site Registration: $175Daily Registration: $115
Five or more attendees per company entitles the company to a reduced rate of $115/registrant.
Conference tuition includes con-ference materials, credits, coffee breaks, continental breakfasts and lunches for both days.
Short courses and the conference will be awarded Continuing Educa-tion Units (CEU’s). This conference is eligible for ABIH certification main-tenance points.
Conference materials will be dis-tributed to attendees on a CD by mail after the conference.
Cancellation Policy
All registrations are subject to a 20% nonrefundable cancellation fee. No refunds will be made two weeks prior to the conference.
Exhibitors
The exhibitor hall will be open Octo-ber 13-14, 2016. The content of the exhibits will include analytical instru-mentation, contract services, and safety/industrial hygiene monitoring equipment.
If your company would like to re-serve exhibit space at the confer-ence, please call Luz Dominguez at 801.581.7909.
Each year, exhibitors donate items for a prize drawing. This year’s drawing will be held during lunch on Friday, October 14th. In addition, participants will be rewarded for completing ses-sion evaluations. Complete your eval-uations to increase your chances in the prize drawing for a gift certificate!
Parking will be available for short course and conference participants in the lot adjacent to the Alumni House. This lot will be reserved for the annual conference attendees. Signs will be posted at the two entrances to this lot and to the overflow lot.
Note: The pay lot directly east of the Union Building is NOT for con-ference attendees.
In partnership with
Utah Section
Utah Chapter
Conference Sponsors
Short Course #1RCRA Refresher8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
This course will give an overview of 40 CFR Parts 260-282, Utah Administrative Code Title R315, and include regulatory updates. This course will also explore general applications found in the work-place.
Instructor: Clint A. Holm, Holm Consulting
Short Course #28-Hr HAZWOPER Refresher
8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.This course meets the requirements outlined in OSHA 29 CFR 1910.120 for eight hours of annual refresher training for workers at hazardous waste sites. The course is designed for general site workers who remove hazardous waste or who are exposed or potentially ex-posed to hazardous substances or health hazards.
Instructor: Mike Hampton, Rocky Moun-tain Center for Occupational Safety and Health – University of Utah
Short Course #3OSHA 7225: Transitioning to
Safer Chemicals8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
This course covers a proactive ap-proach to reducing the use of hazard-ous chemicals in the workplace by tran-sitioning to safer alternatives. Course topics include identification, evaluation, assessment and implementation of saf-er chemical alternatives. Participants will use OSHA’s seven-step substitution planning process. This course features workshops and hands-on activities with the use of various online chemical data-bases and tools.
Upon completions participants will have the ability to recognize and evaluate hazardous chemicals in their workplace, assess safer alternatives, and imple-ment those alternatives. Instructor: Augie Pirmann, Intermoun-tain Safety Training and Consulting
Short Course #4Incident Investigation/CSI
8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.The Salt Lake Technical Center sup-ports OSHA compliance officers inves-tigate difficult and novel accidents in workplaces. The root cause of many fa-tal incidents is not immediately obvious. Understanding the why of an event goes a long way to preventing future acci-dents. Actual cases will be used to high-light the varied and different ways OSHA scientists use principles of Chemistry, Engineering and Industrial Hygiene in solving cases. Important skills for inves-tigators will be shared, including pho-tography, measurement, evidence pres-ervation, rules of thumb, how to decide what tests (destructive, non-destructive) and evaluations are necessary and suf-ficient to reach a valid assessment.
Instructor: Dan Crane, OSHA - Salt Lake Technical Center
Pre-Conference Short Courses AT A GLANCEWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2016
SC#1 SC#2 SC#38:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
RCRA Refresher – Clint A. Holm, Holm Consulting
8-Hour HAZWOPER Refresher – Mike Hampton, Rocky Mountain Center for Occupational Safety and Health – University of Utah
OSHA 7225: Transitioning to Safer Chemicals – Augie Pirmann, Intermountain Safety Training and Consulting
SC#4 SC#5 SC#6 SC#78:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Incident Investigation/CSI – Dan Crane, OSHA - Salt Lake Technical Center
Delivering Exceptional Training: Practical Skills and Knowledge – Kevin Robison, Centurylink
Personal Disaster Pre-paredness – Lowell Finney, Salt Lake City Corporation
Managing Difficult People – Diane Passey, Intermountain Healthcare
SC#8 SC#9 SC#10 SC#111:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
OSHA 7845: Recordkeeping – Gary Petersen, Intermountain Safety Training and Consulting
Avoiding Runovers & Backovers – Bradley M. Sant, American Road & Transportation Builders Association
Management of Change – Stan Smith, OSHA - Salt Lake Technical Center
Operational Risk Manage-ment – Robert Dechant, Barrick Gold Corp. & Mark Chavez, Okland Construc-tion
SHORT COURSE TUITION• $150 for one 4-hour course• $195 for two 4-hour courses or one 8-hour course.
Attendance at the conference will lower short course tuition to $125 for one 4-hour course or $175 for two 4-hour courses or one 8-hour course.
*Short course and conference tuition are separate.
PRE-CONFERENCE SHORT COURSES Wednesday October 12, 2016
Short Course #5Delivering Exceptional
Training: Practical Skills and Knowledge
8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.This course will provide the safety & health professional with the practical skills and knowledge needed to deliver exceptional training. It will improve ones ability to engage learners in a meaning-ful learning experience that will change behavior and improve safety & health performance.
Instructor: Kevin Robison, Centurylink
Short Course #6Personal Disaster
Preparedness8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
This course will address a variety of di-sasters that can or may take place here in the Salt Lake Valley and how an in-dividual can prepare themselves and their family for what some day, may hap-pen. Topics will be covered that include: emergency food, water supply, filtration, sanitation, sheltering, communications, lighting, weather, and evacuation.
The four parts of any emergency re-sponse plan will be discussed which include: planning, finance, logistics, and operations. These principles will be used to address disasters for the busi-nesses and organizations can be con-verted and applied to the individual and family plans.
Instructor: Lowell Finney, Salt Lake City Corporation
Short Course #7Managing Difficult People
8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.Difficult people surround us, and con-flict is inevitable. Part of a successful professional toolbox is the ability to ad-dress situations where real or potential conflict arises. This interactive and fun course will provide you with a variety of skills that can help you manage your-self and your responses as you navi-gate these difficult exchanges. Some of the skills will be deciphering individual perceptions, managing your own stress during conflict, managing different con-flict styles, listening, boundary setting, dealing with defensiveness, delivering unwelcome news, using the power of empathy, and reconnecting with your support network, just to name a few. The instructor will use scenarios, games, and easy role plays, and you will leave with vocabulary and dialogue to add to add to your toolbox.
Instructor: Diane Passey, Intermountain Healthcare
Short Course #8OSHA 7845: Recordkeeping
1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.This course covers OSHA requirements for maintaining and posting records of occupational injuries and illnesses, and reporting specific cases to OSHA. Upon course completion students will have the ability to identify OSHA requirements for recordkeeping, posting and reporting and to complete OSHA’s required forms.
Instructor: Gary Petersen, Intermountain Safety Training and Consulting
Short Course #9Avoiding Runovers &
Backovers1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Avoiding Runovers and Backovers pro-vides information to minimize struck-by incidents in roadway work zones. Course materials contain information needed to develop and implement In-ternal Traffic Control Plans (ITCPs) on construction sites as the primary means to reduce runovers and backovers. It focuses on blind spot recognition, work zone access/egress, and safe backing procedures.
Instructor: Bradley M. Sant, American Road & Transportation Builders Association
Short Course #10Management of Change
1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.Brief discussion of OSHA’s MOC pro-cess as outlined in 29 CFR 1910.119, Process Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals. Followed by a more detailed discussion of how sim-plified MOC processes can be used in industry. This will include ideas and sample programs that have been suc-cessfully implemented at facilities I have worked at and/or have visited.
Instructor: Stan Smith, OSHA - Salt Lake Technical Center
Short Course #11Operational Risk Management
1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
This short course will provide partici-pants with an overview of the basic prin-ciples of operational risk management and the practical implementation of the most popular Risk Management Tools to include: High Level Risk Assess-ments, Formal Risk Assessments, Job Hazard Analysis, Field Level Risk As-sessments, and BowTie Assessments. While the principles and tools covered in the course can be applied by any dis-cipline/functional group, the course will be geared toward the S&H Professional, covering the basics as well as how to practically apply them. Instructors: Robert Dechant, Barrick Gold Corp. & Mark P. Chavez, Okland Construction
REGISTER ONLINEhttps://umarket.utah.edu/um2/rmcoeh
or by filling out and returning the registration form in this brochure
Registration FORM
NAME _________________________________________________ (as you want it to appear on your name tag)
TITLE __________________________________________________
CERTIFICATION (CSP, CIH, ASP CHMM, Other) _______________
ORGANIZATION ________________________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
CITY _________________ ST ______ ZIP ______________
E-MAIL ________________________________________________
PHONE _______________________________________________
Short Course Registration (October 12, 2016)Please enroll me in the following short course(s): Please just write the Short Course # below.8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. _______8:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. _______1:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. _______
RACE (optional) q Hispanic or Latino q White q Black or African American q Asianq American Indian or Alaska Native q Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander INDUSTRY (mark all that apply) q Government q Private Industry q Self Employed q Academiaq Student q Healthcareq Mining q Oil & Gasq Construction q Manufacturingq Consulting
PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPq AIHA q ASSEq Utah Safety Council q Other
YEARS IN EH&S PROFESSIONq 0-4 q 5-9 q 10-15 q >16
q I am NOT attending the conference; my short course(s) registration is: q $150 for one 4-hour course q $195 for two 4-hour courses or one 8-hour
course
q I am attending the conference; my short course(s) registration is: q $125 for one 4-hour course q $175 for two 4-hour courses or one 8-hour
course
Conference Registration (October 13-14, 2016) (NOTE: Registrations may not be shared) q Pre-Registration: $150 q On-Site Registration: $175 q Company Registration: $115/attendee for 5 or more attendees/company q Daily Registration: $115/day (Date Attending: __________________________________)
Meal Options q I will attend the conference lunches q I will attend the conference lunches, but would prefer vegetarian meals
Short Course Registration $ ___________ q Check made payable to RMCOEH is enclosedConference Registration $ ___________ q Government Purchase Order # ____________ Total $ _________ A $7.50 processing fee will be charged for all POs. Please mail registration form to: RMCOEH, Attention: Coordinator, University of Utah, 391 Chipeta Way, Suite C, Salt Lake City, Utah 84108 | Fax registration form to 801.585.5275
Please call 801.581.4055 to register with a credit card, or register online https://umarket.utah.edu/um2/rmcoeh
*Please note that photographs will be taken at this conference and used in future marketing pieces.
Keynote LECTURESThursday, October 13th, Keynote Lecture Building Blocks of Ergonomic Enforcement; Success, Failure, and Granite from Utah - Brett Besser, CPE, CIH, MSPH; Senior IH/Ergonomist with the US Department of Labor/OSHAEvery year musculoskeletal injuries rank near the top of OSHA recordables. The Agency has struggled with enforcing ergonomics since the Salt Lake Technical Center’s Health Response Team wrote the first citation in 1978. Early multimil-lion dollar successes where followed by frustrating defeats. Standards come and standards go, interest in the science waxes and wanes, each administration pulls the response either right or left. Through all this OSHA has continued to move forward admittedly glacially at times. But now the pieces are in place to effectively address this issue.
Brett Besser is a Senior Scientist with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and a member of local AIHA section since 1982. He obtained his BS in Chemistry and Microbiology from Metropolitan State University in Denver and a MPH from the University of Utah. He obtained his CIH in 1989 and CPE in 2002. He has performed over 400 workplace evaluations since 1990, ranging from office environments to meatpacking facilities to warehousing operations and is a technical expert for OSHA’s regulatory activities in the field of ergonomics. He is a visiting instructor at the OSHA Train-ing Institute and has lectured regularly at the University of Utah. He has consulted with other government agencies and private industries over the last 25 years and has frequently presented at local, national, and international conferences.
Friday, October 14th, Ed P. Mayne Memorial Keynote Lecture Driving Real Change in Human Performance - Vince “Bluto” Saporito, Check-6, Inc.This high-energy presentation, filled with entertaining video clips, shares with the conference attendees proven best prac-tices from aircraft carrier operations, airline aviation, and space operations. The entertaining, interactive, and insightful presentation identifies how tragic incidents within these industries kick-started their performance/safety initiatives into a journey towards sustaining an environment of continuous improvement.
• Working in high consequence industries requires the safest environment possible. Identifiable solutions generated from proven best practices can dramatically accelerate any industry toward that objective, while simultaneously en-hancing productivity and operational excellence.
• When best practices are applied from US Navy carrier based aviation you are able to manage risk, minimize human error, develop leadership, accountability, and operate at such a high level, the solution will be of significant value to everyone in any industry.
• An immediate culture change can be achieved while improving leadership development, operational processes and team behaviors.
Vince “Bluto” Saporito is the Director for Global Business Development – Mining. Bluto’s experience stems from his 24 year service flying fighter jets for the U.S. Navy and experience as a military diplomat. As a pilot, he repeatedly served as a flight instructor, including a tour as a TOPGUN instructor in Fallon, NV. Throughout his career, he flew all models of the F-14 Tomcat and F/A-18 Hornet, accumulating over 2900 flight hours, 449 aircraft carrier landings and 45 combat missions. Due to his extensive experience in South America, “Bluto” was later selected to be the Naval Attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Santiago, Chile, where he and his family lived for four years. In recognition of his distinguished service, he has received the Legion of Merit, the Chilean Navy Naval Order of Merit (Category of Knight), and multiple combat “V” awards for valor in combat. His article Taking the Mining Industry to a Higher Level of Excellence and Validating the Need for a Checklist Culture in Mining have been published in multiple mining magazines. An Aerospace Engineer from Texas A&M University by education, “Bluto” has demonstrated a track record of affecting culture changes in high reliability organizations resulting in dramatic performance and safety improvements.
Agenda AT A GLANCE 7:00 a.m. Registration and Conference Breakfast - Utah ASSE Breakfast Speaker8:30 a.m. Welcome and Introduction
AIHA Meritorious Achievement Award, ASSE Safety Professional of the Year AwardRMCOEH 2016 Award of Excellence in Workplace Safety & Health
8:50 a.m. Keynote Lecture: Building Blocks of Ergonomic Enforcement; Success, Failure, and Granite from Utah, presented by Brett Besser, US Department of Labor/OSHA
9:30 a.m. Break to Sessions, Exhibits and Networking
Session 1 Session 2 Session 3 Session 4
Breakout Sessions
10:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
Industrial Hygiene Occupational Safety Workforce Legal Issues Construction, Oil & Gas, Mining
Manganese in Welding – Dan Nye, RMEC Environ-mental, Inc.
Use of Mixture Calcula-tions for Contaminates Affecting the Same Target Organ – Tori Burns, Que-star Gas
Heat Stress – Rod Handy, RMCOEH, University of Utah
Managing Difficult People – Diane Passey, Inter-mountain Healthcare
Interacting with the Media – Darren Shepherd, Questar Corp.
Employment Relationship Under the FLSA – Lee Ann Dunbar, Regional Area Administrator, US-DOL/WHD
Multi-Employer Worksite Implications – Greg Baxter, USDOL/OSHA
OSHA Inspection - What to expect and how to handle it – Chuck Keller, Snell and Wilmer
Work Zone Safety Session – Brad Sant, American Road and Transportation Builders Association
11:30 a.m. Break for Lunch (provided), Exhibits and Networking
Session 5 Session 6 Session 7 Session 8
Breakout Sessions
1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
OSHA Tech Center Safety Performance Environmental Issues Construction, Oil & Gas, Mining
Determining CO Exposure from Carboxyhemaglobin Levels – Scott Jones, USDOL/OSHA
CO2 Overexposures in Breweries & Sausage Factories – Jedd Hill, US-DOL/OSHA
Aniline Exposure with a Reactor Vessell – Phil Smith, USDOL/OSHA
Human Factors and Risk Management – Clint Holm, Holm Consulting
Reasonable Suspicion – Mark Anderson, WorkCare
Sources and Impacts of Air Pollution in the Unitah Basin – Seth Lyman, PhD, Utah State University, Vernal Campus; Jerimiah Lamb, Utah State Univer-sity, Vernal Campus
Air Quality along the Wasatch Front – Nancy Daher, Utah Department of Air Quality
Confined Space Entry in Construction - Practical Applications and Imple-mentation – Dave Holland, Wasatch Safety
Silica in Construction - Flint Belk, WCF Insurance
2:30 p.m. Break, Exhibits and Networking | Little Giant/Sure Sales Demonstration
Session 9 Session 10 Session 11 Session 12
Breakout Sessions
3:00 p.m. - 3:45 p.m.
Technologies Human Factors and Safety
EHS Legal Aspects Construction, Oil & Gas, Mining
Emerging Technologies – Phil Smith, USDOL/OSHA
Micro GC – Hanseup Kim, PhD, University of Utah
Real Time Sensor Net-works: Lessons Learned – Phil Lundrigan & Kyeong Min, University of Utah
Lone Wolf Worker Round Table - Todd Lindley, Rocky Mountain Power; Lenny Kimball, Questar Pipeline; Mark LeBlanc, UOSH, Representitive from Cartasite - SPOT
Expert Witness, Environ-mental Law Aspects and Attorney Client Privilege – Blaine Rawson, Ray, Quinney, and Nebeker
What is the Effect of Fracking on the Worker? – Rod Handy, RMCOEH
Eye Protection and the Z-87 Standard – Neil Powell, Edge Eyewear
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 2016
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 14, 2016
8:00 a.m. Continental Breakfast8:30 a.m. Ed. P. Mayne Memorial Keynote Lecture: Driving Real Change in Human Performance presented by
Vince “Bluto” Saporito, Check-6, Inc.9:30 a.m. Break to Sessions, Exhibits and Networking
Session 13 Session 14 Session 15 Session 16
Breakout Sessions
10:00 a.m. - 11:30 a.m.
Industrial Hygiene Occupational Safety Workplace Violence Health CareExplosives Safety – Jordan Dzubak, SMS Energetics
Combustible Dust – Lee Hathon, USDOL/OSHA
Business Model for Safety – Kevin Robison, Centurylink
Safety Performance Awards & Accountability – Nate Spencer, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
Workplace Violence – Lee Perry, Utah Highway Patrol
Active Shooter – Lee Perry, Utah Highway Patrol
Physical Demands As-sessment/Testing – Ben Graham, Major Drilling
11:30 a.m. Break for Lunch (provided), Exhibitor Prize Drawing
Session 17 Session 18 Session 19 Session 20
Breakout Sessions
1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.
Safety & Health Fleet Safety Environmental Regulations
Risk Assessment
Safety Climate – Doug Handy, Liberty Mutual
PPE- Glove Improvements – Ryan Knight, HexArmor
Fleet Wellness Programs and DOT Physicals – Dr. Nathan Foote, Intermoun-tain Healthcare
Modern Vehicle User Interfaces, Big Distraction Potential – Joel Cooper, PhD, University of Utah Research Strayer Lab
RE-sponse and RE-cov-ery to Disaster – Matthew Beaudry, Director, Be Ready Utah, State Office of Emergency Manage-ment
DEQ Regulatory Update – Rusty Lundberg, Division of Waste Management
Bowtie Analysis – Mark Chavez, Okland Construc-tion
2:30 p.m. Adjourn
Agenda AT A GLANCE
The 33rd
Annual Conference on Safety and
Industrial Hygiene
Nonprofit Org.U.S. Postage
PAIDS.L.C., UT
PermitNo. 4978
Utah Safety Council1574 West 1700 South, Suite 2ASalt Lake City, UT 84104
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
October 12-14, 2016University of Utah
A. Ray Olpin Union Building, Salt Lake City, Utah
Register on-line at https://umarket.utah.edu/um2/rmcoeh
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