OSHA and EPA are the only federal agencies protecting the safety and health of the U.S. public. While, OSHA concentrates on issues of workplace safety, EPA on the other hand, has a wider scope. The two have different legal authority: EPA applies to offsite effects while OSHA is for on-site effects. In the aviation industry, the hazard evaluation team is obliged to assess the hazards, likely to affect the environment or public offsite. Suitable employee protection measures are likely to imperil the public (Smith & Kriebel, 2010). In the aviation sector, the joint OSHA team identifies various hazards expected to be addressed by the hazard communication standards of OSHA. They entail hazards posed by jet fuel vapors, commercial cleaning agents and combustion de-icing chemicals, bi-products, medication and compressed oxygen present in emergency medical kits. Workers are likely to be exposed to cleaning agents as they are used by airline cleaning staff between flights. In addition, this will also be possible following a passenger emergency or a spill during a flight requiring the immediate attention of an employee....
Vapors released by de-icing chemicals and jet fuel may enter an aircraft cabin, posing a potential health threat to people inside the cabin. Employees are subject to encounter medication and compressed oxygen following an emergency. Therefore, the aviation industry would not compromise safety if it complies with the hazard communication standard introduced by OSHA. Under the above circumstances that this paper has considered, employees would adhere to the requirements of the standard, at the same time remaining sensitive to safety concerns of flights (Robson & Toscano, 2007).Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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