1051 1,3-Butadiene?ĭo you plan to evacuate all of your employees and to rely on an outside party to provide emergency response to a hazardous substance release? ![]() 1050 Methylenedianiline?Īre you required to comply with. 1047 Ethylene Oxide?Īre you required to comply with. 272 Grain Handling Facilities?Īre you required to comply with. 119 Process Safety Management?Īre you required to comply with. 10% or greater of Halon 1301, or concentrations exceeding 7% when egress from an area cannot be accomplished in one minute?ĭoes your facility use a fire detection system with alarms or devices that are delayed by more than 30 seconds for reasons other than a total flooding extinguishing system listed above?Īre you required to comply with.Otherwise, you should continue with the questions in the table below.ĭoes your facility use a total flooding extinguishing system that provides any one of the following design concentrations: If you answered "no" to either of the first two or "yes" to all three questions then you are required to develop an EAP. Will any of your employees be required to evacuate the workplace? Evacuation Planning Matrix - Appendix A checklist QUESTIONĪre fire extinguishers provided in the workplace?Īre the fire extinguishers intended for employee use? It does not alert you to other OSHA standards that may be associated with your emergency plan or to the additional OSHA standards that apply to your facility. This checklist is provided only to identify an employer's need to develop an emergency action plan in compliance with the Emergency Action Plan standard (.38). ![]() You can wear it as a scarf or a hood to keep your ears warm.Evacuation Planning Matrix - Appendix A Does Your Facility Need an Emergency Action Plan? Top stitch the folded edge in place by sewing 1/4″ (0.5cm) along the edge. Note, at this point I had zigzaged the raw edge of the wrap as it was fraying and I was having troubles tucking the stray threads into the fold. This step is best done before starting sewing.įold the edge over 3/8″ (1cm) a second time to hide the raw edge. To finish the edges of the cowl, fold over the edge 3/8″ (1cm) and press in place. The seam will look finished on the inside. This will leave a seam and top stitching showing on the outside of the cowl. Sew close to the folded edge of Rail B 1/8″ – 1/4″ (0.5 cm) away from the edge.You will be sewing on the same side as Rail A. Take Rail B and flop the whole seam over to the other side and pin in place. Rail B will cover up the seam allowance from Rail A. Press Rail B over 1/2′ (1.5cm) back towards the seam. This is the trickiest part (or at least the trickiest part to show in pictures). Using an iron, press the seam towards Rail B. Sew a 1″ (2.5cm) seam from Rail B or 1/2″ (1.5 cm) on Rail A. To start, line up the 2 rails with Rail B (the blue one) sticking out 1/2″ (1.5cm) further than the Rail A (the yellow one). It sounds fancy, it looks fancy and yet is easy to sew. I like to hide the seam by making a flat felled seam. You could just sew the rail ends together and call it a day. It isn’t shown until later in this tutorial, but zigzag stitching or serging the raw edges will keep the edges from fraying and keep stray threads to a minimum. Start with a rectangle at least 10″ x 25″ (25cm x 63cm). The side with the plastic bulb goes in the seam and run it along the rail to cut the threads. Careful using this technique on handwovens or loose weave machine wovens as it is easy to catch the threads of the wrap. ![]() The plastic bulb goes into the seam and runs along the rail to quickly cut the threads. You could cut them off, but for most machine woven wraps undoing a hem is quick if you are using the seam ripper properly. If your wrap has hemmed rails, you will need to unpick the hems. That will mean you will have a finished size of 23″ (57.5cm) and it may not make it over your head. The average adult head is 22″ (55cm) and some wraps are only 24″ (60cm) wide. Do you have a piece of wrap that you wish you could have a scarf except it’s only 10+” (25 cm) wide? No problem! Make a cowl instead!įirst measure your head! This is important because you want to make sure this is going to fit over your head once you are done! The width of your wrap should be 3″ (7.5cm) bigger than your head otherwise you are going to have a hard time wearing the cowl.
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