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9 Clases de MP

This document discusses nine classes of hazardous materials and provides guidance on reporting hazardous materials in accident reports. It explains that vehicles carrying hazardous materials must have placards displaying the material's class and ID number. The four key pieces of information to collect are: 1) whether the vehicle has a placard, 2) the four-digit number from the placard, 3) the class number from the bottom of the placard, and 4) whether any hazardous cargo was released. Accurate reporting of these details helps emergency responders and improves transportation safety regulations.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
143 views2 pages

9 Clases de MP

This document discusses nine classes of hazardous materials and provides guidance on reporting hazardous materials in accident reports. It explains that vehicles carrying hazardous materials must have placards displaying the material's class and ID number. The four key pieces of information to collect are: 1) whether the vehicle has a placard, 2) the four-digit number from the placard, 3) the class number from the bottom of the placard, and 4) whether any hazardous cargo was released. Accurate reporting of these details helps emergency responders and improves transportation safety regulations.

Uploaded by

DIEGO ORTIZ
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Hazardous Materials

Class 1: Explosives
Nine Classes of Hazardous Materials
Divisions: 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4,
Class 2: Gases
Divisions: 2.1, 2.2, 2.3
Class 3: Flammable
Liquid and
Class 4: Flammable Class 5: Oxidizer and
Solid, Spontaneously Organic Peroxide
1.5, 1.6 Combustible Liquid Combustible, and Divisions 5.1, 5.2
Dangerous When Wet
Divisions 4.1, 4.2, 4.3

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Class 6: Poison (Toxic) and Class 7: Radioactive Class 8: Corrosive Class 9: Dangerous
Poison Inhalation Hazard Miscellaneous Revised 04/13

Federal Motor Carrier U.S. Department of Transportation


Safety Administration www.fmcsa.dot.gov
Hazardous Materials
Reporting Hazardous Materials Information
ACCURATE REPORTING SAVES LIVES
Data you collect is used to calculate risk assessment, determine response methods, and develop regulations. Vehicles carrying
hazardous materials are required to carry shipping papers containing the HM Class and ID number (or name). Your Accident or
Collision Report/Supplement may ask the following hazardous materials questions (exact wording will vary by State):
1. DOES THE VEHICLE HAVE A HAZARDOUS 2. ENTER THE FOUR-DIGIT NUMBER (OR
MATERIALS PLACARD? YES NO NAME) FROM THE PLACARD 1 9 9 3
8
1993
Placards should be on all four sides of the vehicle. The four-digit number may be on an orange panel
For containers with bulk packages inside, if the or a white “square-on-point” panel.
required ID# marking is not visible, the transport If no four-digit number appears on the 1075 1760
vehicle must be marked on each side and each end. Some Common placard, enter the Placard Name.
Placards
3. ENTER THE HAZARDOUS MATERIALS CLASS NUMBER 4. WAS HAZARDOUS CARGO RELEASED?
FROM THE BOTTOM OF THE PLACARD 3 YES NO
1993 The intent of this question is to determine whether any of the
The Class Number can be a one- or two-digit
number with a decimal in the middle. 5.1 placarded material was released or escaped from its transport
It is critical for identifying and studying various types container into the environment. Fuel or oil carried by the vehicle
of hazardous materials involved in traffic crashes. for its own use is NOT considered cargo and should not be
reported in this section.
Federal Motor Carrier U.S. Department of Transportation
Safety Administration www.fmcsa.dot.gov

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