Tag: Hazmat

  • eShipGlobal’s eShipLab Solution in Yale

    eShipGlobal’s eShipLab Solution in Yale


    Many years ago, Yale University came to us with a challenge they were facing. The university was shipping about 40,000 packages around the world and about 4,000 of it contained regulated research materials (Hazmat). They had about 500 shippers processing packages daily and had little to no insight on what was being shipped from the university on a daily basis. The university needed a system to provide transparency on what was being shipped, by who and was it following hazmat regulations (if necessary).

     

    The Challenge

    Hazmat Shipping

    When shipping research or other hazardous materials, it is important to follow federal hazmat regulations because failing to do so can result in significant fines and civil penalties. They needed a solution that ensured compliance with systems like FAA, IATA, and the DOT. They also needed to ensure that the shippers were authorized and properly trained prior to shipping out hazmat shipments.

     

    Unified System

    In addition to needing something for compliance, the university needed a solution that allowed them to see who was shipping and what they were shipping. The solution needed to be able to integrate with their business systems and allow them to track shipping expenditures. They also needed one solution to manage their various shipping carrier accounts, like FedEx, UPS and DHL.

     

    The Solution

    Our eShipLab solution allowed Yale to manage the entire universities shipping and their multiple carrier accounts. This allowed the shippers at the university to ship using Yale’s carrier accounts for discounted shipping rates and compare carrier costs, saving the university and departments money. Administrators can review the various shipments by material through the dashboard. The system was integrated with their 3rd party legacy systems and since eShipLab is an online system they can access it anytime from anywhere.

     

    One top of improving shipping transparency and management, eShipLab improved hazmat compliance shipping by ensureing that packages meet all compliance requirements from governing entities (FAA, IATA, DOT, etc.). It also helps to ensure that regulated materials were packaged, classified marked and labeled properly by trained, certified shippers. Lastly, restricted party screening (RPS) ensures that it is compliance with export regulations.

     

    eShipLab helped Yale reduce shipping risk, manage the universities shipments, and simplified and automated their shipping process.

     

     

    By Ashleigh Cue

  • Managing Hazardous Material Shipping

    Managing Hazardous Material Shipping

     

    It is important for businesses to run efficiently and compliantly, especially when dealing with restricted or hazardous material. Universities are the same. Universities all over the country are shipping important research material and one university could have several principal investigators shipping hazardous materials. It is important for universities to have a system that guarantees the researchers are shipping compliantly because failing to comply can result in heavy fines and civil penalties.

     

    Yale, classified a R1 university (highest research activity) by the Carnegie Classification of Institution of Higher Education, had to deal with the challenge of monitoring and managing their university shipping. They ship about 40,000 packages a year throughout the world. About 4,000 of those packages contain regulated research materials. They had little to no insight on what was being shipped from their university on a daily basis. They had a problem.

     

    The university wanted a way to improve compliance for shipping hazardous materials and having the assurance that the authorized shippers are properly trained. They also needed a solution that integrated with their university systems so they could track shipping expenditures. They wanted a green web-based system that would allow them to manage all their carriers, track shipments and other shipping reports. This is where eShipGlobal’s eShipLab solution was able to help.

     

    By using eShipLab, Yale was able to improve regulatory compliance with governing entities like the FAA, IATA, DOT, etc. The restricted party screening evaluations also ensured that the packages were compliant with export regulations. The system also helped to ensure that regulated materials were properly packaged, classified, marked and labeled by certified shippers.

     

    eShipLab is a centralized web-based solution. University administrators can review shipments by material with the “in-a-glance” dashboard reporting. Because it is a web-base solution it reduces paperwork through electronic documentation. Yale was also able to save money by having the ability to ship using most carriers and see a route cost comparison during the shipping process.

     

    Other great features eShipLab has is a configurable approval workflow, training verification, the ability to forward shipment information to airlines and shipping carriers, auditing/cost reconciliation and more. It is a customizable solution, allowing you to add-on great packages like: Export Control Compliance, Inbound Shipping and Supply Chain Analysis.

     

    Yale was able to reduce their shipping risk by using eShipLab. They now have an easier way to manage the thousands of shipments the university makes every year. It is simple and automated.

     

    Are you in the need for a hazardous material compliance solution? Do not take the risk. Civil penalties for violating compliance laws can range from in the thousands to in the hundreds of thousands. Why take the risk when there is a simple solution that can help? Stay safe and compliant with eShipLab.

     

     

    By Ashleigh Cue

  • The Sometimes Thrilling, Often Ordinary and Always Critical Role of University Hazardous Materials Professionals

    The Sometimes Thrilling, Often Ordinary and Always Critical Role of University Hazardous Materials Professionals

    In the movies, when the hazmat guys show up in their intimidating panel trucks, decked out head to toe in impermeable safety suits, you just know the plot is about to take an exciting twist. Someone’s suit will get torn, exposing them to a killer virus, or a chemical bomb will go off, leveling a city block — the hazmat guys’ screen time rarely seems to end well.

     

    As is often the case when Hollywood portrays a lesser-known profession, movie depictions of hazardous materials professionals aren’t completely accurate. While there may be moments of intensity or excitement, when life and death balances on the professional’s expertise and the integrity of his or her hazmat suit, the reality is often more ordinary.

     

    Strange but true … and kind of ordinary

    Jeff Christensen, hazardous waste supervisor for the University of Arizona, tells a story that captures the sometimes mundane, sometimes thrilling and often wacky nature of hazardous materials handling. Christensen was once called to a university mail room to retrieve a suspicious package — a cardboard box with the name of a well-known steak and chop seller imprinted on the outside.

     

    No one knew who’d shipped the box or how it ended up on campus. It could hold anything — explosives or Anthrax, a corrosive chemical or rotted meat.

     

    Christensen and his assistant removed the box to a hazmat facility off campus. Inside the cardboard container was an ordinary Styrofoam cooler with the lid glued shut. After prying off the lid, they found inside a bundle tightly swaddled in plastic wrap. Upon cutting through the first layers of the bundle, they encountered a layer of goo that emitted a familiar aroma, one they just couldn’t place.

     

    Finally making it through multiple layers of plastic wrap, Christensen and his partner found 30 pounds of marijuana.

     

    An enterprising student had realized how easy it would be to slip a box unnoticed into the campus mailroom, through which a massive amount of parcels moved each day. Addressed to a fictitious location in a distant state, the box was meant to be intercepted before reaching its fake destination. Somehow, however, it ended up back in the mailroom … and in Christensen’s hands.

     

    And the pleasant-smelling goo? The shipper had added liquid fabric softener to the package, counting on its strong aroma to throw off any drug-sniffing dogs that might encounter the box.

     

    The reality of hazardous materials handling

    From day to day, hazardous materials professionals may be called upon to remove chemical or biological-waste items from offices or labs; package chemical agents for shipment; complete the necessary paperwork and turn the package over to a qualified delivery service; or even train graduate students to properly handle hazards materials in a lab environment.

     

    However, all these seemingly mundane tasks are critical to public safety, and they help ensure corporations and universities remain compliant with numerous regulations that govern the handling, storage, disposal, shipping and transportation of hazardous materials and controlled substances.

     

    Putting hazmat in perspective

    The U.S. Department of Transportation defines a hazardous material as “a substance or material, including a hazardous substance, which has been determined by the Secretary of Transportation to be capable of posing an unreasonable risk to health, safety, and property when transported in commerce, and which has been so designated.”[1] In its Hazardous Materials Transportation Guide, the department lists 20 different classes of hazardous materials, including corrosive and combustible liquids or solids, flammable liquids and solids, gases and biological substances. Multiple federal and state regulations govern the handling, shipping and transportation of hazardous materials, including:

     

    • Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations.
    • Hazardous Material Transportation Act of 1975 (HMTA).
    • Hazardous Materials Transportation Uniform Safety Act of 1990.

     

    Authority for regulating the handling and movement of hazardous materials overlaps among multiple government agencies, including the DOT, OSHA and EPA.

     

    For hazardous materials professionals, ensuring their organizations remain compliant with all regulations can be more pulse-pounding than that moment in a movie when the hazmat-suited hero realizes he’s handling a substance with catastrophic havoc-wreaking potential.

     

    Hazardous materials in university settings

    Universities have always been on the forefront of scientific discovery, and the experiments that lead to world-altering revelations often involve handling and transporting hazardous materials. These substances can be chemical in nature — in liquid, gas or solid forms — biological or even radioactive. Shipping regulated substances can be especially challenging in a university setting, where researchers in different disciplines may need to ship a variety of regulated substances each year.

     

    When it comes to compliance, “most people want to do the right thing,” says Christensen. “And once they know what the right thing is, they do it.”

     

    However, often researchers and technicians well versed in how to safely handle controlled materials in a laboratory setting are unaware of concerns and regulations governing the shipping of those same materials. They may be unsure of how to properly package hazardous materials for safe, compliant transport, or even which carrier is rated to handle that particular substance.

     

    At the recent College and University Hazardous Materials Management Conference in Miami, Christensen sat down with eShipGlobal to discuss challenges of hazardous materials handling and shipping in a university setting, and to foreshadow emerging trends in the industry.

     

    Christensen offered insight into some common campus challenges:

    Training

    Anyone who handles or otherwise comes in contact with hazardous materials requires multiple types of safety training. Hazardous materials professionals in university roles need to know not only how to effectively protect themselves by using hazmat suits and other safety equipment, but they also must be trained in how to ship and dispose of a range of hazardous materials — all while maintaining compliance with myriad regulations.

     

    Necessary skills can include lab safety, animal care and control, environmental safety principles, procedures for testing and sampling a range of hazardous substances, how to calibrate and maintain equipment, identify biohazards and how to prepare reports. A variety of courses, including online options, aim to teach hazardous materials professionals the vast array of skills they need to be effective.

     

    Training is also necessary for others on campus who will work with or encounter hazardous substances. Christiansen offers in-person training courses to students and university staff in departments where hazardous materials will be used.

     

    Inventory control

    In the 1990s, Christiansen once received a call from a retiring researcher. The soon-to-be-former professor asked Christiansen to retrieve and dispose of a hazardous sample the researcher had stored. The sample was in a canister in an unlocked refrigerator in an unsecured equipment room that, Christiansen says, “anybody could get into.”

     

    “I went over there and grabbed the canister, and I was walking out of that building with a can of ricin,” he recalls. Ricin is a highly toxic poison made from the seeds of the castor plant. It looks very much like table salt and inhaling just a few grains of it can kill a person within a few days. There is no cure for ricin poisoning.[2]

     

    Despite multiple layers of security and protocols, universities have always struggled with inventory control. Hazardous materials professionals don’t always know what researchers have in every department of a university, and records-keeping can break down on many levels. When that happens, compliance and safety can be compromised.

     

    Safety

    In the olden days of university research, many researchers had the attitude “it’s not science unless we’ve got a casualty list,” notes Christiansen, who’s been in hazardous materials handling for nearly 30 years.

     

    That attitude is phasing out of the university research environment, he says, thanks in part to better safety regulations. Millennials, who are becoming more prevalent in research capacities, are also more focused on safety, he notes.

     

    Although safety will always be a primary concern for hazardous materials handling on university and college campuses, “it’s getting easier” to communicate its importance to students and researchers, Christiansen says.

     

    Paperwork

    Regulations for procuring, storing, handling and shipping hazardous substances require a paper trail that should follow the material as it moves from point to point. In particular, the paperwork and forms necessary for shipping hazardous materials either domestically or internationally can be complex and burdensome.

     

    Globalization

    More international students than ever before are studying in the United States. Many will be in research capacities where they may come in contact with hazardous materials. Problems can arise when students come from a culture with little or no safety regulations and then encounter the highly regulated environment of American labs.

     

    “The potential for calamity is there,” Christiansen notes, adding that typically, international students adapt quickly to a highly regulated environment once they’re trained to properly handle hazardous materials.

     

    Security

    Although inventory controls may be imperfect and the need for safety training will always exist, security in the post 9/11 world remains both a priority and a challenge for universities.

     

    University campuses are made up of public buildings, and the federal government is the largest source of funding for the basic research that takes place on university campuses, according to the Association of American Universities.[3] Their public nature makes universities especially difficult to secure completely, and that includes labs and storage areas where hazardous materials can be found.

     

    Security challenges and failure to follow protocols established by the university can create an opportunity for mistakes or intentional acts that could endanger the public.

     

    “Overall, I think that most people can be trusted,” Christiansen said. “They have professional pride. But there are always going to be things that need to be worked on.”

     

    Looking toward the future

    As the role of hazardous materials professionals continues to evolve at universities, certain trends are likely to continue emerging.

     

    • Training requirements will continue to change and grow.
    • The need for centralized shipping and purchasing of hazardous materials will gain wider attention and acceptance.
    • The millennial influence will grow and continue to shape attitudes toward safety and security.
    • Waste minimization will be an increasing priority, as university research departments focus on reducing the amount of hazardous waste that needs to be handled and disposed of.
    • The potential for security and terrorism will continue to drive new security policies and procedures.

     

    For the most part, Christiansen says, universities and their hazardous materials professionals have been doing a good job.

     

    “The track record is good,” he notes. “But there always has to be vigilance, and there are always ways we can improve.”

     

    By: Evelyn Pimplaskar

     

    [1] http://ntl.bts.gov/DOCS/hmtg.html

    [2] http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-04/everything-you-need-know-about-ricin-poison-sent-us-senator

    [3] https://www.aau.edu/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=15974