Labelling Hazcom Articles & Analysis
6 articles found
The Hazard Communication standard (29 CFR 1910.1200) is intended to inform employees about the hazards of the chemicals which they are using. The Hazcom standard involves labeling of chemicals, use of safety data sheets and especially training. The Hazcom standard was recently revised to improve worker understanding of the risk and conformity ...
The goal of the program is to ensure that ITW’s business units employ best practices when developing hazard communication documentation such as SDSs and labels, while also promoting conformance with the myriad of regulations impacting ITW’s businesses around the globe. ...
They were drawn to MSDgen’s ability to generate accurate and compliant SDSs and labels in a timely and efficient manner, especially since the team was tasked with re-authoring more than 4,000 SDSs and labels for existing products. ...
OSHA’s promulgation of its Hazard Communication (HazCom) Standard 2012, which aligns with the United Nations’ (UN) Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling (GHS) framework for global harmonization, was a catalyst for the initiative. The New Retail Regulatory Reality: Globalization, Harmonization and Systemization OSHA’s ...
Document templates for producing MSDS, labels and other hazard communication documents and multi-lingual phrase libraries also are available. ...
However, in accordance with a letter of interpretation from OSHA on October 6, 2009, companies can begin following the EU GHS label format for their OSHA labels as long as the labels also comply with the current Hazard Communication Standard. ...
