INDUSTRIAL
SAFETY TRAINING
Transportation of Dangerous Goods Course
This program can be conducted over a four hour duration
during which the objectives are to identify to the students the following.
- know your responsibilities as a handler of dangerous goods
- recognize the nine classes of dangerous goods
- be able to evaluate quality of dangerous goods shipping documents
- check dangerous goods shipments to ensure they comply with the
requirements of the regulations and that consignors have met their
responsibilities
- recognize the labels and placards that are used to identify dangerous
goods
- understand subsidiary risk of labeling and placarding needs
- understand the new clear language of transportation of dangerous
goods regulations
This course covers the basic information that shippers,
handlers and carriers need to know in order to transport dangerous goods
by road. The transportation of dangerous goods regulations came into effect
in 1985 to protect the public and those working within the industry who
come in contact with dangerous goods during transportation. The course
is not designed nor intended to cover all specialized areas, such as shipping
explosives, radioactive materials, special wastes, etc. However, it does
train employees in the basic requirements of the transportation of dangerous
goods regulations. In particular, the "clear language" version
of the regulations, which came into effect in 2002. The TDG Act contains
information about penalties for non-compliance, defense against charges,
enforcement by inspectors and the responsibilities in the event of accidents
or spills.
As previously mentioned, the course can be conducted in
four hours but the length of the program will depend on our customers'
needs as we tailor the course to your requirements.
Program Content
Module 1
s review the TDG Act and regulation
s understand training and certification requirements
s identify shippers and carriers responsibilities
Module 2
s the nine classes of dangerous goods
s divisions within classes used in classifications
s primary and secondary classifications
Module 3
s information required on shipping documents
s container markings and labels
s placarding requirements
Employers need to train their employees to become competent
in dealing with the dangerous goods that they actually handle. In this
light, a basic understanding of exemptions and classifications, documentation,
safety marking is what most employees need to review. It identifies how
to clearly refer to the right section of the TDG regulations and who to
contact when they have questions or concerns. The TDG Act contains information
about penalties for non-compliance, defense against charges, enforcement
by inspectors and responsibilities in the event of accident or spills.
Each province or territory is responsible for enforcement of the TDG Act
for road transport within its' boundaries. Provincial or territorial legislation
adopts the federal regulations and may include other requirements as well.
The federal government enforces the regulations for inter-provincial road
transport as well as air, marine and rail transport.
For further details and course dates, etc. contact ADANAC
College by phone at (250) 656-1468, by fax at (250) 656-5613 or email
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