SAFETY SPECIALIST, MINE SAFETY AND HEALTH
State of Nevada · Carson City, NV · 3 wk ago
ManagementFull-time
Essential Qualifications
- Five years of technical, operational, or management experience in mines, mills, beneficiation plants, or smelters, one year of which must have been spent working underground.
Job Duties
- Conduct safety and health inspections pursuant to NRS 512.170, including metal and non-metal surface (open pit) and underground mines, mills, quarries and related facilities, and in such areas including, but not limited to, ground control, fire prevention and control, air quality, ventilation, explosives (storage, transportation, use, blasting, and related equipment), electrical safety, equipment guards, personal protection, materials storage and handling, safety programs, and personnel hoisting;
- Conduct industrial hygiene surveys, air quality evaluations, noise dosimetry, ventilation surveys, hazardous materials handling, storage and transportation compliance, and material safety data sheet compliance;
- Provide technical assistance and consultation to mine operators in their efforts to comply with State and federal mine safety regulations and to promote and improve mine health and safety conditions in all areas of mine operations to include surface, underground, milling, beneficiation, smelting and refining;
- Measure noise, dusts, metal, and toxic materials using routine industrial hygiene sampling procedures;
- Conduct electrical ground resistivity tests to evaluate electrical safety and conduct mine ventilation surveys when internal combustion engines are in use underground;
- Conduct opening and closing conferences with mine operators and employee representatives;
- Write reports substantiating findings;
- Maintain specialized equipment used in conducting inspections;
- Issue notices of violation requiring abatement within a specified time period and if imminent danger is present, issue an order prohibiting persons from entering an area, or prohibiting the use of equipment and machinery until the imminent danger has been corrected;
- Develop and provide federally required formal training to mine operators and workers in the recognition, avoidance, and prevention of accidents or unsafe/unhealthful working conditions in mines which include new miner, refresher, first aid, mine rescue for surface and underground responders, and instruct-the-instructor;
- Investigate mine accidents pursuant to statute and regulation; inspect disaster potential such as mine fires, explosions, inundations by water or gas, entrapments, falls of ground, and accidents involving machinery and haulage equipment; physically inspect site and equipment involved, interview witnesses, determine cause and contributing factors to extent possible, prepare a report of findings, and recommend procedures to prevent recurrence; issue notices of violation and closure orders as appropriate; testify at federal penalty hearings and civil court proceedings regarding conditions at mine sites and accidents.