Unit VI Case Study
The Scenario:
You are back at your plant the Monday after the Dangerous When Wet leaking tanker incident happened, and you are
telling your fellow HazMat Team Coordinator how you handled the situation. Before he has a chance to offer his opinion, a
call comes in over your radio that a forklift has punctured a 55 gallon drum at the door between the oxidizer storage area
and the production department. There is a spill, and no one is injured; however, the production employee does not know
what was spilled. You make an immediate page to all emergency response team members in the area, and then you head
out the door to the scene with your fellow HazMat Team Coordinator (the production department chief engineer). While en
route to the scene, you call the plant manager and apprise her of what you know and that you will report back as soon as
you have more information.
The incident command center can either be the production office or the conference room near the plant manager’s office.
In this case, your first choice is the production office.
The storage area building has multiple storage bays for oxidizers, flammables, acids, and bases. When you arrive near
the scene, you find the punctured drum on its side against a pallet of three other drums and a very small fuming cloud of
vapor developing from the area, but you cannot tell its exact point of origin. It turns out that the drums are just inside the
storage area building. You can see that the drums on the pallet have flammable labels. The fourth flammable drum has
been knocked off the pallet and is also lying on its side next to the punctured drum. The punctured drum has not been
identified at this point – it is a strong oxidizer, strong acid, or strong base raw material.
Questions:
1. How do you proceed?
2. What information are you after, how do you gather it, and what instructions do you provide for your team?
3. What hazardous situations are you and your team facing? If you need to, you can differentiate these situations
depending on the punctured drum being a strong oxidizer, strong acid, or strong base. Develop a brief priority list
and a brief action list for what you should do.
4. What, if any, restraints should you exercise?
5. What advice would you give to any other individuals coming upon the scene?
BOS 3640, Interactions of Hazardous Materials 4
6. Do you call for an evacuation of any, or all, of the plant itself? There are approximately 180 employees currently
on site during this first shift – located in different areas around the plant (i.e., administrative offices, shipping and
receiving, raw material bulk chemical storage, finished product bulk chemical storage, production operations,
packaging operations, labs, and production/engineering offices).
respond in the form of an essay, which should consist of several
paragraphs and appropriate priority or task lists. Responses should be supported fully and completely. A well-thought-out
response can be accomplished in 300-500 words (one or two pages, double spaced). Any published material used to
support a response should be cited per the APA style guidelines.