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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE TRIPR FLAMMABLE LIQUID UNIT TRAINS 8.0 CLEAN-UP AND POST-EMERGENCY OPERATIONS
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations Neither the U.S. Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA), the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), TRANSCAER®, American Petroleum Institute (API), Association of American Railroads (AAR) or the Renewable Fuels Association (RFA) or any of their employees, subcontractors, consultants, or other assigns make any warranty or representation, either express or implied, with respect to the accuracy, completeness, or utility of the information contained herein, or assume any liability or responsibility for any use, or the results of such use, of any information or process disclosed in this publication, or represent that its use would not infringe upon privately owned rights. This information is designed to supplement existing training resources and should not be relied upon exclusively as a standalone curriculum. Sound scientific and safety judgment should be used in employing the information contained herein. Where applicable, authorities having jurisdiction should be consulted. Neither PHMSA, FRA, TRANSCAER®, API, AAR nor RFA are undertaking to meet the duties of employers, manufacturers, or suppliers to warn and properly train and equip their employees, and others exposed, concerning health and safety risks and precautions, nor undertaking their obligations to comply with authorities having jurisdiction. DISCLAIMER
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations Identify the key factors that should be considered as part of the decontamination, clean-up and incident termination process. Describing the process for transitioning from emergency phase to post-emergency response operations. OBJECTIVES
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations State and federal environmental agencies will assume key roles, especially with spill control, remediation and public health monitoring. Response objectives will change as the incident moves from response to PERO Containment and recovery will be conducted in coordination under the direction of Unified Command. OPERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations The railroads consider the following factors for incident remediation and clean-up: Determine and implement appropriate decontamination processes and procedures to minimize secondary contamination. Determine an effective means to contain all decontamination/gray water runoff. Ensure re-entry air monitoring for evacuees. Implement product transfer and remediation measures to minimize further contamination. Transition from emergency phase to post-emergency response operations. OPERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations For both ethanol and petroleum crude oil the recommended decontamination method is large amounts of water. For skin contact use soap and water. DETERMINE APPROPRIATE DECONTAMINATION
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations Establish the decon line outside of the exclusion/hot zone, downwind and downhill of cold zone/occupied areas. Containment of runoff/gray water is important. Construct a lagoon or pool using existing terrain features. OPERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations Use bladders or portable tanks. Plan on daily service, treatment and/or removal. Ensure re-entry monitoring is conducted for evacuees OPERATIONAL CONSIDERATIONS
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations Follow the Emergency Response Plan. Transfer of command is a formal process. Ensure a complete handoff briefing. Conduct a After Action Review (AAR): – What worked – What didn’t work – Lessons learned – What changes are needed TRANSITION TO POST-EMERGENCY OPS
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations Commodity Preparedness and Incident Management Reference Sheet Clean-Up and Post Emergency Operations REFERENCE SHEET RECAP
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CLICK TO EDIT MASTER TITLE STYLE 8.0 Clean-up and Post-Emergency Operations In this module we presented the following information: – Key factors that should be considered as part of the decontamination, clean- up and incident termination process. – The process for transitioning from emergency phase to post-emergency phase. SUMMARY
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