Tips for Simple and Effective Gas Detection in Water and Wastewater

In this webinar we’ll give you tools and tips that will help simplify your gas detection management program, track exposure data, prioritize maintenance projects, and leverage technology to gain visibility into the wellbeing of your team, even if they are miles away.

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As a safety professional at a water or wastewater treatment facility, it’s your job to protect workers from hazards, including dangerous gases. Gas exposures can be a matter of life and death and there is no easy way to figure out what is happening across your sites, let alone to your workers in the field checking meters or monitoring water quality at a pump station. 

In this webinar we’ll give you tools and tips that will help simplify your gas detection management program, track exposure data, prioritize maintenance projects, and leverage technology to gain visibility into the wellbeing of your team, even if they are miles away.

You’ll learn:

·       How to easily track exposure data back to individuals for follow up and reporting

·       Ways to quickly identify facility maintenance hazards across your site

·       How to leverage technology to ensure the safety of lone workers

·       Ways to simplify gas detector maintenance

Presenter:

David D. Wagner

Director of Applications Engineering & Product Knowledge, Industrial Scientific      

Dave Wagner is currently the Director of Application Engineering and Product Knowledge. He has been extensively involved with the development and application of portable gas monitoring instruments and the development of innovative solutions to complex gas monitoring problems since joining the company in 1986. Dave is a member of the AIHA Real Time Detection Systems Committee and serves on the NFPA 350 committee creating a best practice guide for confined space entry. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from Pennsylvania State University and a Master of Science degree in Management and Technology from Carlow University in Pittsburgh.



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