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Hazardous Waste Management, Annual Refresher. Who needs this refresher training?. Anyone who has had Hazardous Waste Management Training (initial) and who generates any waste to include: chemicals, aerosols, oils, paints, biological waste, bulbs or batteries. The purpose of this training.
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Who needs this refresher training? • Anyone who has had Hazardous Waste Management Training (initial) and who generates any waste to include: • chemicals, aerosols, oils, paints, biological waste, bulbs or batteries
The purpose of this training • To re-familiarize you with ASU’s waste program basics • To let you know of any program changes • To update you on the developments of the EHS Assistant on-line waste pickup • To inform you of any safety issues concerning waste storage or collection
Rules to remember • Nothing down the drain, nothing in the trash • All chemical waste is considered hazardous • All chemical waste needs a completed hazardous waste tag prior to pickup • All liquid biowaste is considered chemical waste • All waste pickup request are made online
The online pickup request • All waste pickup request are online using the EHS Assistant database http://cfo.asu.edu/ehs-environmentalaffairs • Or simply: • go to the EH&S homepage and choose the “Safety Services” tab at the top of the page • scroll down and choose “haz waste pickup” • click on the link • there is also a link to a PowerPoint tutorial demonstrating the pick-up process
Link to pick-up request Link to tutorial
Satellite Accumulation Requirements • Satellite accumulation is the area in your lab, classroom or shop where you keep your waste prior to pickup by EH&S • The rules state that the satellite area must be: • at or near the process generating the waste • be under the control of the generator
Satellite containers • All satellite containers must: • be labeled with the words “hazardous waste”* • be clean and compatible with the waste • include a descriptive waste name (flammable solvents, corrosive base, corrosive acid, nitric waste, acetone solution, piranha, etc) or a detailed listing of all the chemicals in the container* • be marked with the hazard* : flammable, corrosive, aqueous, etc. (listed as the category on the EH&S waste tag) • be kept closed at all times except when adding or removing waste * A completed hazardous waste tag will include these items
Ready for pickup • Prior to pickup each container needs a completed hazwaste tag with an accurate listing of all the chemicals in the waste including volumes or percentages adding up to 100% • You can tear off the white copy and use it to help you when making your online request – we only need the bottom copy • Tag numbers for each container are entered on the online request
Other waste types • Biowaste • Red bag, red drum or yellow drum • All waste must be bagged prior to being placed in the drum • All red bag and red drum waste must be autoclaved • Bags and drums must be closed at all times except when adding waste • Sharps • All sharps must be in a ridged, puncture resistant, closed container • Sharps include needles, syringes, scalpels, Pasteur pipettes, and pipette tips from both biological and chemical use • Biological sharps must be autoclaved • Universal waste • All batteries must be collected for pickup and recycling • All intact light bulbs must be accumulated for pickup and recycling • Broken bulbs must be contained and treated as hazardous waste
More waste • Aerosol cans • All aerosol cans must be collected for pickup and recycling • Per regulation, no can is ever considered empty and can never be put in the trash • Oil • Oil is considered a chemical waste • Oil is collected for recycling
Regulated items and Recycling • Regulated items that cannot be recycled • Sharps • Syringes, Pasteur glass pipettes, pipette tips • Plastic lab ware • Plastic pipettes (regulated as biowaste) • Regulated items that can be recycled but only through EH&S (cannot be mixed with any other recycling items) • Intact light bulbs • Batteries • Aerosol cans
Closed containers • Can I leave the funnel in the container, while I go out of the room or to another lab bench? I’m going to add more waste to the container is just a few minutes…… No, the rules state that the container must be closed at all time except when adding or removing waste.
Safety update • Do not use heavy walled glass containers (such as an acid bottle) for mixed waste streams. These containers allow a great deal of pressure to buildup in the bottle – several violent bottle bursts have occurred. • Use only thin walled clear glass bottles for mixed waste.
Waste containers Do not use heavy walled containers for mixed waste
Secondary Containment • Secondary containment is recommended at all times, especially when waste is stored on the floor or other unprotected area • Never mix incompatible waste in the same secondary containment unit