US DOT requires hazmat training for all employees who can affect the safety of hazardous materials in transportation, including employees who:
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See a more detailed definition of "hazmat employee" on the Hazmat FAQ page, or see 49 CFR 171.8.
Lion provides hazmat training required to ship or transport hazardous materials by ground, air, or vessel under US Department of Transportation (DOT/49 CFR), IATA DGR, and IMDG Code standards.
These DOT, IATA, and IMDG hazmat shipping courses are ideal for professionals who interpret and apply US or international hazardous materials or dangerous goods regulations. Who Needs Hazmat Training?
Hazmat training and regular re-training is required by 49 CFR 172.704, IATA DGR 1.5, & IMDG Code 1.3.1.
These hazmat training courses focus on the requirements for shipping specific hazardous materials like lithium batteries, hazmat limited quantities and consumer commodities (formerly ORM-D), regulated medical waste, and hazmat auto parts.
Ideal training for shipping a single hazardous material or shipping products/wastes that are subject to unique requirements. For more details to help you choose lithium battery shipper training that fits your needs, visit Lion.com/Lithium.
These courses provide required hazmat training for employees with limited, specific responsibilities for hazardous materials transportation safety. Ideal for pickers, packers, shipping clerks, loading dock workers, and other "hazmat employees."
Employees who classify hazardous materials, select proper shipping names, determine authorized packaging, supervise hazmat employees, or sign shipping papers/Manifests should complete comprehensive hazmat training.
Must-know details about hazmat training for organizations that ship hazardous materials/dangerous goods.
US DOT requires hazmat training for all employees who can affect the safety of hazardous materials in transportation, including employees who:
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See a more detailed definition of "hazmat employee" on the Hazmat FAQ page, or see 49 CFR 171.8.
Key regulations about the timing and frequency of hazmat training:
New hazmat employees must be trained within 90 days of hire/assignment.
Hazmat training must be repeated at least every three years (every 24 months for air shippers).
New hazmat employees must work under supervision until trained.
Employers must keep records of hazmat training.
The minimum civil penalty for hazmat training violations is >$500 per day, per employee.
The maximum civil penalty for a typical hazmat violation is >$90,000 per day, per violation.
[See 49 CFR 172.704 and 49 U.S.C. 5123]
Find more details about when and how often to provide hazmat training for employees on the Hazmat Training FAQ page.
[49 CFR 172.704(a)(1)–(a)(5)]
Q: Do I need hazmat safety training?
A: US DOT’s official policy is that “safety training” is required for hazmat employees who physically handle or transport hazmat packages and who may be exposed to hazmat as a result of a transportation accident. This is understood to include packers, warehouse personnel, drivers, train crews, and employees who load/unload aircraft and vessels. [See 57 FR 20949, May 15, 1992]
Read more: What is Hazmat Safety Training & Who Needs it?
Q: Do I need hazmat Security Plan training?
A: US DOT requires some hazmat shippers to create and maintain a security plan. If your facility is required to have a security plan, then hazmat employees must receive training on their responsibilities under the plan.
Read more: Who Needs a Hazmat Security Plan?
IATA DGR Hazmat Training for Air Shippers
If you offer hazardous materials/dangerous goods for transport by passenger or cargo aircraft, you must know the unique, additional IATA Dangerous Goods Regulations (DGR) requirements that apply to the air mode. The IATA DGR Section 1.5 requires hazmat training once every 24 months for all employees involved in preparing or offering shipments for air transport.
IMDG Code Hazmat Training for Vessel Shippers
If your business ships hazmat by vessel, your shipments must comply with the International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code (IMDG Code) as well as DOT's 49 CFR hazmat regulations.
See the Hazmat Training FAQ page for answers about hazmat employee training for ground shippers, or our Dangerous Goods Training FAQ page for air and vessel shippers.
The instructor took a rather drab set of topics and brought them to life with realistic real-life examples.
Tom Berndt
HSE Coordinator
The instructor was energetic and made learning fun compared to dry instructors from other training providers.
Andy D’Amato
International Trade Compliance Manager
The instructor's energy, enthusiasm, and knowledge of the subject make the class a great learning experience!
Brian Martinez
Warehouse Operator
I really enjoy your workshops. Thank you for such a great program and all the help Lion has provided me over the years!
George Chatman
Hazardous Material Pharmacy Technician
I have attended other training providers, but Lion is best. Lion is king of the hazmat jungle!!!
Henry Watkins
Hazardous Waste Technician
I have over 26 years of environmental compliance experience, and it has been some time since I have attended an environmental regulations workshop. I attended this course as preparation for EHS Audits for my six plants, and it was exactly what I was looking for.
Frank Sizemore
Director of Regulatory Affairs
Excellent. I learned more in two days with Lion than at a 5-day program I took with another provider.
Francisco Gallardo
HES Technician
Our instructor was very dynamic and kept everyone's interest. Hazmat shipping can be a dry, complicated topic but I was engaged the entire time.
Kimberly Arnao
Senior Director of EH&S
Excellent class, super instructor, very easy to follow. No rushing through material. Would like to take his class again.
Lawrence Patterson
EH&S Facility Maintenance & Security Manager
Given the choice, I would do all coursework this way. In-person courses go very fast without the opportunity to pause or repeat anything.
Ellen Pelton
Chemical Laboratory Manager
Ace hazmat inspections. Protect personnel. Defend against civil and criminal penalties. How? See the self-audit "best practices" for hazardous materials shippers.
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