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One Safety Week tradition is the daily email to building staff (the Valley Bldg Announcements list) with safety tips and a puzzle challenge.

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titleSafety Week 2011: Fire Safety & Prevention

Word Search Puzzle- fire.pdf

Fire Prevention & Safety Checklist

v  The most effective way to protect yourself and your home from fire is to identify and remove fire hazards.

v  Sixty-five percent of home fire deaths occur in homes with no working smoke alarms.

v  During a home fire, working smoke alarms and a fire escape plan that has been practiced regularly can save lives.

  

 

Be Red Cross Ready

v  If a fire occurs in your home, GET OUT, STAY OUT and CALL for help.

v  Install smoke alarms on every level of your home, inside bedrooms and outside sleeping areas. Test them every month and replace the batteries at least once a year.

v  Talk with all household members about a fire escape plan and practice the plan twice a year.

Additional information: http://www.redcross.org/portal/site/en/menuitem.86f46a12f382290517a8f210b80f78a0/?vgnextoid=5e06a5f0f013b110VgnVCM10000089f0870aRCRD

 

Housekeeping 

v  Keep clutter out of halls, lobbies, alleys, and other public areas.

v  Keep waste paper, empty boxes, dirty rags, cleaning supplies, and other combustibles out of exits, storage areas and stairways.

Wiring  

v  Replace any cracked, frayed or damaged electrical cord.

v  Never run extension cords across doorways or where they can be stepped on or pinched or run over by chairs or other furniture.

v  Do not plug extension cords into each other and avoid plugging more than one extension cord into an outlet.

v  Be sure to use an appropriate extension cord for the appliance being used.

Equipment and Appliances  

v  Leave space for air to circulate around heaters and other heat-producing equipment, such as copy machines, coffeemakers, and computers.

v  Keep appliances away from anything that might catch fire.

v  Do not stack books or papers on top of computer monitors.

  

Employees should

v  Count the doors or desks between their work areas and the nearest exit.

v  During a fire, employees may have to find their way out in the dark.

v  Learn the location of alternative exits from their work areas in case the primary exit is blocked by smoke.

v  Know the location of the nearest fire alarm and how to use it so co-workers can be alerted to the fire.

If Fire Strikes 

v  Sound the alarm and call the fire department immediately, no matter how small the fire appears to be.

v  Leave the area quickly, closing doors as you go to contain the fire and smoke.

v  If you encounter smoke or flame during your escape, use an alternative exit. Heat and smoke rise, leaving cleaner, cooler air near the floor. If you must exit through smoke, crawl on your hands and knees, keeping your head 12 to 24 inches (30 to 60 centimeters) above the floor.

v  Test doors before you open them. Kneeling or crouching at the door, reach up as high as you can and touch the door, the knob, and the space between the door and its frame with the back of your hand. If the door is hot, use another escape route. If the door is cool, open it slowly.

v  Once outside, move away from the building. Never go back inside the building until the fire department says you may go back in.

  

Additional Information:

http://www.abcofire.com/2011/04/office-fire-safety-tips-stay-calm/ 

http://www.compliance.gov/forms-pubs/publications/bulletins/bulletin_fire_feb2007.pdf

http://www.discoverdixon.org/fire-department/office-building-fire-safety.html

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titleSafety Week 2013: Medical Emergencies

safety-medical-emergencies-cryptogram.pdf

Today we wrap up Safety Week by reviewing how to respond to a medical emergency. Visit the Library Safety Essentials wiki page anytime to refresh your knowledge of emergency response procedures.

Responding to a Medical Emergency

The basics

  1. Call 9-1-1
  2. Keep victim still, comfortable, and safe
  3. Provide first aid if trained
  4. Send someone to meet ambulance

The basics PLUS

  1. Remain calm and call 9-1-1. Use a cell phone, office phone, black campus phone in the avenue, or red emergency phone in the stairwell. Give the operator your name, location, and phone number, and provide as much information as you can about the victim and the injury or illness.
  2. Do not move the victim, unless it is dangerous for the person to stay there. Keep the victim as calm and comfortable as possible.
  3. Provide first aid, or start CPR when necessary, if you have been trained in the proper techniques. (See below for more information about training.)
  4. Stay with the victim until medical assistance arrives. Send someone to meet the ambulance and guide the emergency responders to the scene.

So, how do you recognize a medical emergency in the first place? MedlinePlus offers a summary of warning signs

Red Cross workers with regimental dogs in World War I

National Library of Scotland on Flickr

Training in First Aid and CPR/AED

Excellent turnout for the in-house first aid and CPR/AED training this week! If you were not able to attend and are still interested, you can take advantage of the classes offered throughout the year at Dixon Recreation Center. You’ll find training instructions and links on the Safety wiki. Simply approach your supervisor for permission, find a session to attend, and register directly with Recreation Services. After class, share a copy of your certification record with the OSULP Safety Council to join the list of certified staff.


Congratulations to Kristin Swetland of the Teaching and Engagement Department for being the first (who hadn’t previously won) to finish the word search yesterday. Today you are challenged to crack the cryptogram (attached)! And you are invited to submit answers to any of the puzzles by 5 PM today to enter the raffle.

Thanks to everyone for participating in Safety Week at The Valley Library

The OSULP Safety Council

Natural Disasters (Earthquakes & Tsunamis, Winter Storms & Floods)

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titleSafety Week 2021: Earthquake Preparedness!

Earthquakes!

Image Added

Despite the fun graphic above, earthquakes are a destructive reality here in the region. Today’s message will look at responding safety to these rumblers and serve as a shout-out for the “Great Shake Out” (details below)!

So if you’re in the building and feel an earthquake:

  • Protect yourself (Drop, Cover and Hold-on).  Evacuate the building as soon as you deem it safe.
    • Stay away from glass
    • Do not use a doorway unless you know it is a load-bearing doorway
    • Do not exit the building while shaking is going on.  Falling debris can kill you
    • Do not use elevators
    • Do not pull fire alarm
  • If outside during the shaking, move away from buildings or other objects that could fall
  • Bring only items you can easily grab, including backpacks especially packed with emergency gear, coat, hat, phone, essentials (e.g. handbag).

After the earthquake:

  • Do not re-enter a building until it has been seismically inspected
  • Expect aftershocks and more building damage to occur
  • Extinguish small fires
  • Follow OSU guidance for follow-on activities.

If you want to practice your earthquake response technique, join in on the campuswide Great Shake Out scheduled tomorrow at 10:21.

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Tunes for the continuing safety soundtrack! (many thanks to those have submitted these songs-remember there is a prize drawing!)

“All Shook Up”, “Run-I’m a Natural Disaster”, “It’s the End of the World As We Know It”, “Shake, Rattle, and Roll”, “Little Earthquakes”, “Shake It Off”, and “The Floor Is Lava.”


Stay safe and stay tuned for tomorrow’s topic: communication!


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titleSafety Week 2016: Earthquakes

Earthquakes

 Not to shake you up, but all of us should be prepared for what to do in the case of an earthquake.

As always, take a look at Library Safety Essentials for basic tips about what to do in the case of an emergency.

For earthquakes, the library safety essentials page reminds us the basic steps are.

1)    Drop, cover and hold until shaking stops.

2)    Evacuate.

 

In more detail:

  1. Drop down to your hands and knees. This position protects you from falling but allows you to move if needed.
  2. Cover your head and neck. Also preferably shelter your entire body by getting under a sturdy desk or table. If there is no shelter nearby, get down near an interior wall or next to furniture that won’t fall on you.
  3. Hold on to your shelter (and/or your head and neck) until the shaking stops. Be prepared to move with your shelter if needed.
  4. Only evacuate once the shaking of the earthquake has stopped.

 See OSU Emergency Management and Oregon Healthy Authority’s earthquake preparedness page for more details about how to drop, cover, and hold on and details about evacuation.

 How can you prepare?

1)    Review Library Safety Essentials

2)    Consider your surroundings during your work day and where the best place would be to take cover/shelter. Prepare for other scenarios such as being outside or driving while the earthquake happens.

3)    Review the OHA’s earthquake preparedness page:

http://public.health.oregon.gov/Preparedness/Prepare/Pages/PrepareForEarthquake.aspx

 and if you’re going to visit the coast, OHA’s tsunami preparedness page:

 http://public.health.oregon.gov/Preparedness/Prepare/Pages/PrepareforTsunami.aspx

Quiz Time

Reply with your responses to enter the daily and grand prize raffle!

  1. Along with dropping, covering, and holding on - what should you attempt to avoid being near during an earthquake?
  2. If the lights go out and the sprinkler system goes on in the building while an earthquake is still in progress, should I evacuate?
  3. What should you consider after you evacuate a building post-earthquake?

Yesterday’s winner to be announced by Bryan. J

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