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Project
Safety Analysis (PSA)
For each
project with significant hazard potential conducted by Engineering employees in Engineering
facilities, the Faculty or Principle Investigator(s)
must initiate a Project Safety Analysis (PSA) on each
new project, before the project begins.The Engineering
Program began requiring PSA in Feb-1996.In Spring
2001,TAMU began requiring safety analysis and planning
for activities and projects of recognized student
organizations, academic class projects, and other
activities of concern.
What
is Project Safety Analysis?
PSA is
a procedure to increase the knowledge of hazards in
a project, operation, or activity by identifying the
potential for loss and risk, early in the project
planning process.
Incorporating
PSA into the planning stage of a project will aid
in identifying and preventing EH&S situations,
during and following the project.For example: identifying
the equipment, chemicals, materials and procedures
to be used, allows us to foresee potential hazards,
select appropriate protective equipment and controls,
identify personnel training needs, and plan for ultimate
disposal of left-over equipment, materials and wastes.
Purpose
of PSA:
To provide
faculty and researchers with the opportunity to review
the environmental health and safety aspects of the
research project to be undertaken, to identify potential
risks and hazards, to implement safe standard operating
procedures (SOP's) and to implement necessary protective
controls.This will help protect the researchers, graduate
students, and staff involved with the project, as
well as conserve environmental resources and facilities.
Scope:
All Faculty
and Principal Investigators (PI's) shall file a written
report on the environmental health & safety aspects
of each research project prior to the initiation of
that exercise.The Project Safety Analysis (PSA) shall
identify potential hazards and risks by the use of
system safety analysis techniques, and shall detail
the engineering and administrative controls that will
be necessary to protect the researchers, graduate
students, and staff as well as the occupants of the
building, and the environment.The PSA will identify
the costs, and the source of adequate funding, to
implement necessary controls and abate hazards.It
will identify necessary personnel training needs.The
PSA will identify a plan for ultimate disposition
of leftover instrumentation, equipment, materials
and wastes; and for mitigation, decontamination and
clean up.The completed and approved PSA will serve
as the "Operational Procedure (SOP) and "Safety Manual"
for the referenced project.
Extent
of Applicability:
Recognizing
that no activity is without some degree of risk, and
that certain routine risks are accepted without question
by the vast majority of persons (for example: machine
shops that do not handle hazardous materials, cars
used for personal transportation, etc.) the applicability
of this analysis has been limited to those academic
and research projects that involve hazards not routinely
encountered and accepted in the course of everyday
living by the vast majority of the general public.
The analysis
of a project which involves only hazards of a type
and magnitude routinely encountered and accepted by
the public will require justification which can be
referenced to a recognized source.
Assistance
in Conducting PSA:
The Office
of Engineering Safety is available to work with the
Faculty/PI and research staff to identify potential
hazards of the project and to identify necessary protective
control measures.
This Guide
to Project Safety Analysis is provided as a convenient
tool to initiate the PSA process.
Final
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