Comment by yeeeloit
2 years ago
Exactly, silica is not the problem. Silica is everywhere, we don't wear PPE to drive down a dirt road.
It's the silica plus the adhesive additives combined in your lungs that does the damage.
2 years ago
Exactly, silica is not the problem. Silica is everywhere, we don't wear PPE to drive down a dirt road.
It's the silica plus the adhesive additives combined in your lungs that does the damage.
> Exactly, silica is not the problem
It is. The air-driven rock drills were called "widowmakers" by miners because of silicosis that quickly reaped its operators.
> Silica is everywhere, we don't wear PPE to drive down a dirt road.
Silica down the road is not in the form of fine dust.
Maybe. Or it's the dose, which sounds quite high when working with engineered stone.
Or the size of the particles. Cutting engineered stone has been shown to generate large quantities of extremely fine particles (< 1 µm). Cutting natural stone or driving on a dirt road, the typical particle sizes are much larger.
Why isn’t it being cut wet? Surely if dust is the problem, water is the solution.
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It's the bozos working with the stuff without proper PPE.
I watched a grave marker carver absolutely bathing in dust with just a thin bandanna, I was in there for 5 minutes and was left choking in their hazardous work environment.
WitH sufficient PPE and dust control, it's not a problem. This is just barking up the wrong tree because they can't get workers to not be idiots, so they pick a scapegoat to ban at random. It's not fucking asbestos. It's apparent but ineffective motion by expediency.
> they can't get workers to not be idiots
Is it that or is it that someone doesn't want to pay for those industrial-scale air cleaners?
I got a little interested in particulate air quality during covid so I ran across the entrepreneurs selling them. You can probably make the air in a quarry as clean as in a surgery room, if you're willing to pay.
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I don't think seeing one person do something can really compare to having a dedicated taskforce do 2 years of research into an industry, in terms of understanding risk and what practical options there are to manage said risk.
From the report:
> A total of 12 successful prosecutions have been reported since 2021, with many related to the uncontrolled processing (dry cutting) of engineered stone materials
https://www.safeworkaustralia.gov.au/sites/default/files/202...