CLICK HERE to Renew your Membership
CLICK HERE for a NEW Membership
CLICK HERE to see eligibility requirements for FREE Membership
If you have any questions, please contact me

I am proud to announce that SAFTENG and The Chlorine Institute have renewed our partnership for another year (through 2026).  Members of The Chlorine Institute receive a FREE SAFTENG membership.  If you qualify, please contact me

NOTE: Any trade group interested in becoming a partner with SAFTENG for your Member Companies, please reach out, and I can share the plan

SAFTENG has:

Many THANKS to my NEW Members and those who CONTINUE to support SAFTENG:

Since 2012
Since 2025
Since 2010
Since 2008
Since 2026
Since 2026
OneDigital | Resourcing Edge Since 2026
Since 2015
Since 2010
Since 2024
Since 2008
since 2012
Since 2024
Since 2010
OSHA issues Willful and Serious after slag fatalities @ power plant (LOTO and PPE)
OSHA has cited a power company and a contractor after five workers were killed, (1 plant operator and four contractors) and one other suffered serious burns. In June 2017, OSHA determined that the workers were burned when a blockage inside a coal-fired furnace broke free and spewed molten slag into the work area. Employees of the power plant and two (2) contractor companies died in the incident. OSHA...
Read More
Father and son die in PRCS; son entered, father attempted rescue (H2S)
At 2:00 p.m. on June 13, 2017, two employees, a father and son team, were replacing a pump. The son was overcome by hydrogen sulfide gas and became unconscious. As the father retrieved his son from the pump lift station, he fell and a suffered blunt force trauma injury. Both father and son died.  OSHA issued numerous citations using their relatively new Confined Spaces in Construction standards.  ...
Read More
Line Break/Process Opening GONE BAD (NH3 Pump Down)
On May 20, 2017, at 11:30 a.m. Employee #1, a refrigeration technician, and a coworker were performing pump down of a live ammonia refrigeration line to make the pipe available for replacement. The two (2) employees had checked the line on the roof with a blower and thinking it was clear, went to the engine room to open a valve. The valve was difficult to open, and they believed it was clogged. Employee...
Read More
A new grade of anhydrous ammonia fertilizer means an MOC, PSSR, etc.
This month Koch Agronomic Services (KAS) announced they have developed a “nitrification inhibitor” for their anhydrous ammonia (NH3) fertilizer that will significantly improve nitrogen use efficiency (NUE) to increase crop output while minimizing environmental losses.  This is great news for all of us; however, for those at the facilities where this new grade of NH3 is being...
Read More
Using codes/standards from foreign countries to improve process safety
Ontario’s Engineering Data Sheet 4-04: Anhydrous Ammonia is an excellent source of reliable safety information for the design of and practice of safely handling anhydrous ammonia.  It is another example of how we can use information from other agencies around the world to better design, build, operate and maintain processes handling/storing/processing highly hazardous chemicals. …...
Read More
OSHA wins Silica Rule Appeal
Industry petitioned for review of five issues: whether substantial evidence supports OSHA’s finding that limiting workers’ silica exposure to the level set by the Rule reduces a significant risk of material health impairment; whether substantial evidence supports OSHA’s finding that the Rule is technologically feasible for the foundry, hydraulic fracturing, and construction industries; whether...
Read More
scaffolding hell
2017 Photo of the Week #52 (Scaffolding ingenuity or stupidity?)
Read More
2017 Video of the Week #52 (Above the UEL)
I have always wanted to do this kind of real-life demo/experiment during my FLAG training sessions but in today’s litigious environment I have always feared what could go wrong.  Step in some brothers in the fire service and we now have a video showing why being in an atmosphere ABOVE the Upper Explosive Limit (UEL) is extremely dangerous.  The use of the high-speed...
Read More
Annual SOP(s) review and training
As this year comes to a close, I was reminded by a FaceBook post of a common misconception regarding 1910.119(f)(3), which is actually two (2) separate requirements/actions stated in a single paragraph of the standard.  The standard states: 1910.119(f)(3) The operating procedures shall be reviewed as often as necessary to assure that they reflect current operating practice, including...
Read More
The safety irony award of 2017
Just in time to win this year’s Safety Irony Award, the Philidelphia City Council passed a bill this week that calls for the city’s Department of Licenses and Inspections to develop rules for the “USE OR REMOVAL” of the bullet-proof barriers by January of 2021.  This news came on the heels of OSHA’s announcement this week that “Workplace...
Read More
Combustible Dust and EPCRA 311/312 reporting
For those who deal with emergency planning and response know all too well about EPCRA’s Tier Sheets, most notably Tier II sheets that facilities submit annually so as to inform the emergency response community of their hazardous materials and extremely hazardous substances on site.  These Tier sheets have been around since 1986 and are still a staple item for Fire Departments to understand...
Read More
Correcting RMP with new emergency contact information
As I have said before, one of EPA’s most cited RMP matters is the lack of “updating the RMP with emergency contact information within a month of the change“.  But today, the EPA offered some insight for those who may not have an emergency contact assigned within the month of the change.  For me, there are MUCH LARGER ramifications for a facility who feels they do not...
Read More
1 372 373 374 375 376 756

Partner Organizations

Member Associations

Scroll to Top