- Certificate of Fitness
- Cooling Towers and Legionnaires Disease
- Lead in Drinking Water
- Emergency Generators
- Laboratory Safety
- Hazardous Waste Regulated Waste
- Hazardous Waste Regulated Waste
- Env Compliance Pollution Prevention Guide SQG
- Lehman College Universal Waste Management Plan
- EPA Listed Hazardous Waste
- Hazardous Waste Training Notes
- Hazardous Waste Container Management
- Hazardous Waste Labels
- EPA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
- Regulated Medical Waste
- Managing Regulated Medical Waste
- Hazard Control
- Material Safety Data Sheets
- Ventilation & Indoor Air Quality
- CUNY Alert
- Certificate of Fitness
- Cooling Towers and Legionnaires Disease
- Lead in Drinking Water
- Emergency Generators
- Laboratory Safety
- Hazardous Waste Regulated Waste
- Hazardous Waste Regulated Waste
- Env Compliance Pollution Prevention Guide SQG
- Lehman College Universal Waste Management Plan
- EPA Listed Hazardous Waste
- Hazardous Waste Training Notes
- Hazardous Waste Container Management
- Hazardous Waste Labels
- EPA Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
- Regulated Medical Waste
- Managing Regulated Medical Waste
- Hazard Control
- Material Safety Data Sheets
- Ventilation & Indoor Air Quality
Related Links
Chemical inventory: Reporting
Chemical inventory: Reporting
Hazardous chemicals - in their pure state and as ingredients in manufactured products - are encountered in many different business-, manufacturing- and institutional settings, including college campuses. Many areas of NYC are mixed-use (residential, educational, commercial, hospital, etc.); some types of occupancies might contain hazardous materials that could affect the entire area. In cases of emergencies that could involve hazardous materials stored and used in a specific area, local emergency response agencies (FDNY, DEP, NYPD) must have up-to-date chemical inventory information of entities in the response area.
Any employee who stores and/or uses hazardous chemicals at Lehman College must maintain an up-to-date chemical inventory of that space. Environmental Health & Safety uses these inventories annually to report and comply with such agencies as the NYC Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) Community Right to Know Program [Local Law 26 of 1988], NYC Department of Environmental Conservation, FDNY and the United States Department of Homeland Security. Developing a plan of action is imperative for government agencies and emergency responders in order to plan for potential chemical releases and exposures.
For more information, please contact Shaldon Watson (x4104).