Working with silt or contaminated soil after a natural event or emergency (2024)

Always assume that debris and flood water (and therefore silt) is contaminated with farm run-off, chemicals, or sewage. Contaminated debris, flood water, and silt can make you sick.

You need to take precautions when you are disturbing silt, debris, or floodwater when working.

What could make you sick

There are three ways you can come into contact with things that will make you sick, either in the short term or a number of years or decades later.

Things you could breathe in if they get in the air

  • general dust
  • asbestos
  • respirable crystalline silica
  • legionella bacteria
  • gases including hydrogen sulphide, ammonia, chlorine, carbon monoxide
  • vapours (solvents, pesticides, herbicides, paints)
  • fungi
  • metal dust
  • heavy metals (arsenic, lead, mercury).

Things you could accidentally ingest

For example, from droplets entering your mouth or nose, or from contaminated hands on food or cigarettes.

  • bacteria (including E. coli, salmonella, leptospiroda, campylobacter)
  • heavy metals (arsenic, lead, mercury).

Things that could come into contact with your skin or eyes

  • volatile organic compounds, including glues, solvents, pesticides, herbicides, paints
  • bacteria
  • viruses
  • fungi.

Before you dig or move silt

  • Consider what is upstream or nearby. Are there factories or industrial buildings, sewerage treatment plants, landfill tips, animal feedlots, chicken sheds, or piggeries?
  • Search the area for any debris that might suggest that asbestos, chemicals, or rotten animals may be present. Are there chemical drums, broken building materials, open septic tanks, buried vehicles, shipping containers, discoloured or unusual looking soil?
  • Are there any unusual smells such as decaying animal carcasses, decaying food, rotten egg gas, or chemical smells?

If you see or smell something suspicious, stop and seek advice from a specialist such as an appropriate environmental scientist or occupational hygienist before digging or moving silt.

Find an appropriate adviser | HASANZ Register(external link)

When digging or moving silt

Where possible, use machinery such as an excavator, tractor, or a loader to do the job. Keep all doors and windows on the machinery closed while digging.

If moving silt by hand, cover up as much as possible, use personal protective equipment (PPE) like:

  • coveralls
  • gloves
  • safety glasses, goggles, or face shields
  • masks such as a P2 disposable or reusable half face respirator with P2 filters.

Personal protective equipment (PPE)

Avoid using water blasters on silt and dirty surfaces as this will cause harmful germs and asbestos and chemicals to get into the air. Use normal low pressure hoses and brooms to push wet material without making it airborne.

Regularly take breaks and make sure you wash your hands and face with soap before eating, drinking, smoking, or vaping (hand sanitiser will not work against chemicals).

If you cut yourself or break the skin, stop work and apply first aid including cleaning the wound. Seek medical attention if you think it might be infected or if the cut is deep.

Stop work if you find any debris that may be hazardous such as fibre cement roofing or cladding, chemical drums, or an animal carcass. Check that you are able to safely deal with it before returning to work. If in doubt seek advice from a specialist such as an environmental scientist or occupational hygienist.

If you or your staff experience any health issues (including dizziness, skin rash, eye irritation, or breathing problems) stop work immediately, provide your staff with adequate first aid and seek advice from an appropriate environmental specialist or occupational hygienist before recommencing work.

When you are finished

  • Remove PPE and dispose of it, or place items to be cleaned in a separate sealed bag.
  • Ensure all visible mud and debris on footwear is washed off and spray the footwear with a disinfectant such as bleach.
  • Immediately wash hands, arms, and face with warm soapy water. When able to, shower using soap to remove any chemicals or germs that you may have been exposed to.
  • Wash all clothing used separately from regular laundry. Consider wearing a mask and gloves when removing it from the bag it is stored in – especially if the clothes are muddy or dusty.
Working with silt or contaminated soil after a natural event or emergency (2024)

FAQs

How do you deal with contaminated soil? ›

Options for treating contaminated soil include:

Soil stabilisation involves the addition of immobilizing agents to reduce a contaminants' leachability. Physical methods, like soil washing, use water to separate or remove contaminants.

How to remove silt from soil? ›

To separate the silt and clay, the easiest way to to put them in water with some alum or Calgon and shake it vigorously for a couple minutes. This separates all the particles. Then you set the container down. After 24 hours, the silt has settled and only the clay is left floating around in the water.

What happens if your soil is contaminated? ›

Contaminated soils can leach toxic chemicals into nearby ground or surface waters, where these materials can be taken up by plants and animals, contaminate a human drinking water supply, or volatilize and contaminate the indoor air in overlying buildings.

What is silt soil used for? ›

Silty soil is usually more fertile than other types of soil, meaning it is good for growing crops. Silt promotes water retention and air circulation. Too much clay can make soil too stiff for plants to thrive.

What are the solutions to soil contamination? ›

Solutions to reduce soil pollution

Encourage a more eco-friendly model for industry, farming and stock breeding, among other economic activities. Improve urban planning and transport planning and waste water treatment. Improve the management of mining waste, restore the landscape and conserve topsoil.

How to deal with silt? ›

Silt Removal – The Disposal

The most significant problem to overcome with silt removal is what to do with the material. Onsite solutions are to pump it into de-watering bags, dredge it behind a permeable membrane, utilise flat land and bunding. The removal of silt off site can be a very expensive alternative.

What to do with silt? ›

Silt can be used for land restoration and landscaping projects, such as regrading uneven terrain or filling in depressions.

What are the treatment techniques for contaminated soil? ›

The most effective method will depend on the type and concentration of contaminants present in the soil as well as local regulations. Common techniques include excavation/removal; biological treatment; thermal treatment; physical/chemical treatment; and in situ treatment.

How long does it take to clean contaminated soil? ›

Excavating contaminated soil may take as little as one day or as long as several years. The actual time it takes to excavate will depend on several factors. For example, it may take longer where: The contaminated area is large, very deep, or below the water table.

Is soil contamination reversible? ›

Fourth, soil pollution is irreversible. Heavy metals are not easily degradable; as a result, the soil pollution caused by them is almost an irreversible process.

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