If you must not pour hazardous wastes down the drain or on the ground, or even put them out with your regular trash, what on earth should you do with them? Recall the Spaceship Earth analogy, then see if the following steps make sense.
Learn to recognize what material are hazardous
If you think a product you are considering buying might be hazardous, read the label. Look for words such as danger, warning, or caution. Some labels describe the hazard with words like corrosive, flammable, toxic, or explosive. And sometimes labels indicate a health risk, irritant or harmful if swallowed.
Purchase the least toxic product available
Choose products made from safe, biodegradable materials. Select a water-based substance over solvent-based one for products like paint, glue, and shoe polish. Avoid aerosol products, which release fine particles of propellant every time they are used. When out inhale, these particles can lodge in your lungs
Buy only as much as you need
If you buy a gallon of oil-based paint when you need only a quart, you will have to store the remainder. If it gets old and dried up, you may end up throwing it out with the trash.
Use as directed
Use the recommended amount of a product, not more or less. Never mix chlorine-based cleaning products with those containing ammonia. If the material is flammable, extinguish nearby pilot lights. If it is to be used in a well0ventilated area, open the doors and windows or turn on an exhaust fan. Take whatever precautions are necessary to protect enter your body by absorption through the skin or inhalation of fumes and vapors.
Store unused portions properly
Keep the product tightly sealed, upright, and in its original container. Make sure that toxic products are not stored near food and that children and animals cannot reach them. Keep inflammable products away from a source of hear. Consider giving unused portions of substances like paint and paint strippers to friends and neighbors, a church, or a social service agency.
Recycle the product if possible
Some hazardous materials, such as paint thinners, motor oil, and car batteries, can be recycled.
Dispose of hazardous wastes properly
When you decide to get rid of unused portions of a hazardous material, check the label to see if it contains any directions for disposal. If so, follow them.
Some communities maintain a permanent hazardous waste collection center. Others set temporary centers a few times a year to collect waste. If you are not certain what your community does, call the city public works department for information. Should the city have no provisions at all for dealing with hazardous waste, write letters to the mayor, other public officials, and the newspaper about the need for a collection center. And try not to buy any more hazardous products yourself.
Monday, June 16, 2008
Handle, Store, and Dispose of Hazardous Wastes Properly
Posted by
Clive Chung
at
3:28 AM
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