• Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Statement
  • Site Map
  • Links

Occupational Health And Safety Reps. Information, Advice, Support...Speaking Up Together

Ask
Renata
 All Site    SafetyNET
  • Subscribe
  • Tell a friend
  • Change font
    • A
    • A
    • A
    • A
  • Print this page
  • Save this page
  • Hazards
    • Asbestos
      • Asbestos in the home
      • Asbestos in the workplace
    • Asthma
    • Biological Hazards
    • Bullying & Violence
    • Call Centres
    • Chemicals
    • Fatigue & Impairment
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Nanotechnology
    • Noise
    • Plant
    • Radiation
    • Slips, Trips and Falls
    • Strains and Sprains
    • Stress
    • Vibration
    • Workplace Conditions
  • Law & Rights
    • Law
      • The OHS Act
      • Regulations
      • Compliance Codes
      • Codes of Practice (1985 Act)
      • Comcare
      • Model OHS Law
    • Rights
      • OHS Reps' Rights
      • Workers' Rights
  • News & Views
    • Media Releases
      • Subscribe
      • Media Releases Archive
    • International NewsWire
    • Features
    • People in OHS
    • Campaigns
      • Asbestos Awareness
      • International Workers Memorial Day
      • Zero Occupational Cancer
      • Behaviour Based Safety
      • International RSI Day
      • It's time to deliver
    • Your Say
    • OHS Reps Conferences
      • OHS Reps Conference 2005
      • OHS Reps Conference 2006
      • OHS Reps Conference 2007
      • OHS Reps Conference 2008
      • OHS Reps Conference 2009
      • OHS Reps Conference 2010
      • OHS Reps Conference 2011
  • FAQs
    • Asbestos
    • Electrical Safety
    • Workplace and Amenities
    • FAQs for OHS Reps
    • FAQs for Workers
    • Other
  • SafetyNet Journal
    • Current Issue
    • Subscribe
    • Un Subscribe
    • SafetyNet JOURNAL Archive
      • SafetyNet 2012
      • SafetyNet 2011
      • SafetyNet 2010
      • SafetyNet 2009
      • SafetyNet 2008
      • SafetyNet 2007
      • SafetyNet 2006
      • SafetyNet 2005
      • SafetyNet 2004
      • SafetyNet 2003
      • SafetyNet 2002
  • Your Industry
    • Construction & Utilities
    • Education
    • Government (local, State)
    • Health & Community Services
    • Hospitality
    • Labour Hire
    • Manufacturing
    • Mining
    • Office/Admin
    • Rural
    • Service Industry
    • Transport, Storage & Trade
  • Training
    • Subscribe to Training News
  • ToolKit
    • Behaviour Based Safety Programs
    • Mapping
    • How to...
    • Checklists

Your Industry

  • Construction & Utilities
  • Education
  • Government (local, State)
  • Health & Community Services
  • Hospitality
  • Labour Hire
  • Manufacturing
  • Mining
  • Office/Admin
  • Rural
  • Service Industry
  • Transport, Storage & Trade
 
  • Home
  • Your Industry
  •  > Construction & Utilities

Silica

Exposure to silica dust causes many problems not only to miners and quarry workers, but also to workers in certain types of construction and demolition work, as well as those working in art rooms.

Silica dust is so fine it can enter the deepest parts of the lungs. This dust can build up in the lungs and scar them - leading to a number of diseases (see more information, below).

Action Plan for Health and Safety Reps

A strategy to prevent work related injury and illness must be aimed at modifying the workplace - controlling the hazard at source - rather than modifying, screening or excluding workers from the workplace.
 
As an OHS rep, you need to make your members aware of the risks of exposure to silica and ensure that the employer complies with his/her duties under the legislation to eliminate or reduce the risks.
  • Check that materials used for abrasive blasting DO NOT contain more than 1% silica.
  • Equipment used for cutting, grinding, etc. should be fitted with dust extraction devices.
  • Where dust extraction is not practical, wet methods should be utilised.
  • Unfortunately, for many jobs, some form of respiratory protection will be required. The type of respirator will depend on the amount of dust created by the process. Ensure the workers are thoroughly trained in the use and maintenance of respiratory protective devices. This training must be provided by an appropriately trained person before workers are required to use the PPE.
  • Where there is likely to be excessive dust, all other workers should be cleared from the area so as prevent any unnecessary exposure.
  • The removal of residual dust generated by the work process must be done in a manner that will not make the dust airborne.
It is important that there be monitoring of silica dust levels generated by the activity. The results can then be used to establish effective control methods in work practices and ensure that they remain effective. It is important that an approved workplace consultant who can also provide advice on workplace control strategies do monitoring. Contact your union for further advice.

Legal Standards

Silica is classified as a hazardous substance and is therefore regulated under the Chapter 4 - Hazardous Substances and Materials - of the 2007 Occupational Health and Safety Regulations.  This means that the employer has the legal duty to identify the hazard and eliminate or control any risk, provide information and training , undertake atmospheric monitoring, maintain records and, in the case of chrystalline silica, carry out health surveillance.
 
On 1 January 2002, the use of materials containing more than 1% crystalline silica for abrasive blasting was prohibited in all Victorian workplaces. The prohibition was made under the Occupational Health and Safety (Hazardous Substances) Regulations 1999. This means materials such as silica sand, river sand, beach sand and other white sands must not be used for abrasive blasting. The WorkSafe webiste has more information on the ban.
 
More information on the duties of the employer under Part 4.1 - Hazardous Substances - of the OHS regulations. 
 
The National Occupational Health and Safety Commission (NOHSC - now SafeWork Australia) has revised the exposure standards for the three forms of crystalline silica, quartz, cristobalite and tridymite. The revised national exposure standards for the three forms are 0.1 mg/m³ (time weighted average, 8 hours). (This is half the previous standard, which was 0.2 mg/m³.) The revised standard came into effect January 1, 2005.

More information on silica and its effects

The following activities create silica dust:
  • Brick cutting and chasing.
  • Angle grinding on concrete or masonry.
  • Concrete cutting.
  • Jack hammering, scabbling and chiselling or concrete.
  • Cleaning up of dust and debris created by the above activities.
Workers at risk include those involved in:
  • building, construction and demolition work
  • excavation work
  • abrasive blasting (but use of silica in abrasive blasting is now prohibited in Victoria - see below)
  • mining, quarrying, crushing and tunnelling work
  • brick making and glass making
  • road building
  • stonework
  • foundry or casting work
  • explosives blasting work
  • art workers, including teachers and cleaners
  • jewellery workers (particularly in developing countries)
What are the health effects of exposure to silica dust?
The following diseases are caused by excessive exposure to airborne silica dust:
  • Silicosis
  • Acute silicosis (rapid development after short exposure to high concentrations of silica dust).
  • Silicotuberculosis (silicosis sufferers are at a higher risk of developing tuberculosis)

Silica dust, along with other atmospheric contaminates, can also cause or exacerbate these diseases:

  • Simple chronic bronchitis;
  • Chronic airway obstruction;
  • Lung cancer.
What is silicosis?
Silicosis is a serious disease of the lungs caused by breathing in crystalline silica dust. Crystalline silica is a basic component of soil, sand, granite, and many other minerals (a common type is quartz). It can become respirable dust when workers chip, cut, drill, or grind objects that contain crystalline silica. In addition, the practice of using sand and other materials containing silica for abrasive blasting led to the creation of high levels of crystalline silica dust.
 
Silicosis can be disabling or even fatal. There are three types of silicosis:
  1. Chronic/classic silicosis - this is the most common form and occurs after 15-20 years of moderate to low exposures to respirable crystalline silica.
  2. Accelerated silicosis - which can occur after 5-10 years of high exposure.
  3. Acute silicosis - which can occur after a few months or as long as 2 years after exposure to extremely high levels of crystalline silica.
Crystalline silica also causes cancer of the lungs.
 
In April 2006, a multisector agreement to protect workers exposed to crystalline silica dust was signed by the social partners in Europe (trades unions and employers' representatives).  The agreement aims to reduce workers' exposure to crystalline silica dust through good practice in the workplace. The principal tool for the implementation of the agreement is the Good Practice Guide on Workers Health Protection Through the Good Handling and Use of Chrystalline Silica and Products containing it [pdf].  The guide includes task sheets by the sectors.

See also

  • WorkSafe Victoria:
    • Health and Safety Solutions: Stonemasonry - Preventing crystalline silica exposure and Ceramics Handling crystalline silica powder
    • Code of Practice for Foundries [ pdf]
    • Guidance Note: Roof Tile Cutting Silica Dust Exposure
  • Concrete Cutting and Drilling Industry Guide [ pdf] - A Queensland government publication.
  • From the US National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), a webpage on silicosis - specifically for workers in construction and abrasive blasting.
  • Fact Sheet on Silica and Silicosis [ pdf] from the Workers Health Centre in NSW.
  • From UK union Amicus - a range of information products on silica, including a guide for its members on controlling silica.
  • Concrete Products Health Hazards - from British Colombia Construction Safety, has lots of information on the hazards associated with concrete.
  • From the HSE : a range of COSHH (Control of Substances Hazardous to Health) Essentials with a range of flyers for managers and then a number of topics for:
    • Brick and tile making - information on clay milling, sand handling and screening, facing green bricks with sand, moving green and fired bricks, manual dehacking and batching, tile pressing, ventilated vehicle cabs 
    • Construction - information on concrete scabbling, chasing, Drilling and coring with power tools, crushing and screening, clearing and removing rubble, tunnelling and shaft sinking, and more  
    • Ceramics  - information on glaze and colour preparation, casting, fettling, kiln loading (placing) and unloading, and spraying glazes and colours
    • Foundries
    • Manufacturing - information on making products that include mineral powder, dry-mixing powders containing silica, and small packing operations: Dry products containing silica
    • Quarries - information on exacavting and haulage, crushing, drying and cooling, dry screening , silica flour: bag filling and transfer, cleaning up silica dusts and more
    • Slate Works - information on primary sawing, automated slate sawing, sawing slate into special sizes and shapes, manual slate splitting, and dressing slate
    • Stonemasons - information for managers, and on sawing, using rotary tools and chiselling

    And also:

    • Stone dust and you [pdf] advice for employers on how to protect themselves and their employees from harmful dust present in many products like bricks, tiles and concrete.

Important Construction & Utilities Information

  • FAQs

    • Red Cards
    • Licences
    • Rest/meal breaks - what am I entitled to?
    • Working from Heights - what are the regulations?
    • Ladders - What are the Rules and Regulations?
    • Amenities on construction sites
    • Electrical Equipment - What are the laws/guidelines?
    • Forklift Safety
    • Hard Hats - do they last for ever?
    • Compressed Air
    • Resuscitation Equipment
    • Welding - what are the issues?
    • Snakes on sites
    • Other FAQs
  • Hazard

    • Sprains and strains
    • Lasers
    • Sunlight - Ultraviolet (UV) Radiation
  • Items

    • New rules for safer construction work
    • Legislation - Construction/Utilities
    • Construction & Utilities - useful information and websites
    • Construction & Utilities - hazards