University Safety
Glasses Information
The University
safety glass policy
7-23 specifies:
"Every
person shall wear eye protection devices when entering,
participating in, observing or performing any function in connection with,
any course or activity taking place in eye protection areas as defined
above. Persons covered include, without limitation, administrators,
faculty, staff, students, contractors, other employees and
visitors."
Eye protection comes in many forms. Safety glasses must
be worn at all times when there is risk of eye injury due to flying
debris, dust or incidental minor chemical slashes. Users must
upgrade to splash goggles when safety glasses do not protect
against a hazardous materials splash, spray or mist. Face shields
must be worn over splash goggles or safety glasses for operations that
present a high risk of face injury from a chemical splash or flying
debris. Employees, students and researchers should review
the Job Hazard Analysis with their supervisor to determine the most
appropriate level of eye protection.
In
support of safety on campus, the Fisher Scientific Storerooms in
McKinly and Brown Laboratories display many different styles of
safety glasses. Employees, students and researchers can try on
multiple styles of safety glasses to determine which fit the best
and are the most comfortable. Users should choose a pair that
provide complete protection and can be worn for an extended period
of time without discomfort.
Many
opticians can provide prescription safety glasses. There is
currently no preferred vendor. Employees should meet with their
supervisors and determine how much the department/program is
willing to contribute to the purchase of prescription safety
glasses. Once approval is received, the employee should take their
prescription to an optician that sells prescription safety glasses
and purchase.
In general, departments, units and programs must provide
eye protection to all University employees if a Job Hazard Analysis
determines that it is necessary. The University is not required to
provide prescription safety glasses if a suitable "over the
glasses" option works; however, EHS encourages departments to
develop their own internal prescription safety glass policy. The
"over the glasses" safety glasses are often uncomfortable.
Students may be required to purchase their own safety glasses.
If you have any questions or need assistance please contact
Jane J. Frank or call x2103.
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