I have worked with solid LDA, although I find it is more trouble than it's worth. Since you have it, however...
The biggest issue I have with the solid LDA is that it sucks up water very rapidly, and LiOH usually isn't what I want to be adding to the reaction. If you've got a glove box, you're golden - weigh it out and dilute it in the glove box. If you don't, there are reasonably cheap (~$50) "glove bags" that can be used for the purpose (see for example
http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/catalog/ProductDetail.do?lang=en&N4=Z530204|ALDRICH&N5=SEARCH_CONCAT_PNO|BRAND_KEY&F=SPEC).
If you have to work with it outside a glove box, it is pyrophoric but as others have noted, not nearly as bad as some other things like t-butyl lithium or solid sodium. Like I said, the worst problem is that it picks up water very quickly, so on muggy days you may end up with a lot of LiOH in your LDA. If you work under a nitrogen blanket (an inverted funnel connected to your nitrogen line works fairly well), you can transfer your material from the original container to a tared vial, cap it, weigh it, and then pour it into your dry solvent with a minimum of issues.
As Honclbrif said, store it in a desiccator or it will go bad very quickly.