|
Did
you know that your house may be "home" to hazardous waste?
A typical
American home contains 25 to 50 pounds of hazardous household waste.
Unwanted containers of cleaners, paints, chemicals, and pesticides
accumulate in almost every basement, under sinks, and in garages.
Improper or careless use, storage, or disposal of these items
can pose a serious threat to your family's health and our environment.
Hazardous
household products and Human Health
Many products
used every day contain dangerous chemicals or compounds. If handled
and disposed of properly, many of these products can be used with
relative safety. Unfortunately, most people are unaware of the dangers
of products like paints and solvents, oven cleaners, drain openers,
bug killers, pool chemicals, or automotive fluids.
A hazardous
product may have from one to all four of the following characteristics:

IGNITABLE
Burns
readily or has a low flash
|

REACTIVE
May
explode or emit poisonous gas
|

CORROSIVE
Corrodes
(burns) skin
or
other surfaces
|

TOXIC
Harmful
to humans,
plants,
or animals
|
Warnings
on product labels indicate the item's relative threat to human health:
Caution
Warning Poison Danger
Hazardous
household products and the Environment
Toxic liquids,
solids, and fumes can threaten the environment, as well as human
health: small amounts of paint, solvents, or other chemicals can
pollute thousands of gallons of groundwater; some aerosol products
release ozone depleting compounds into the atmosphere; toxic fumes
can cause serious indoor air pollution.
Humanity's
future depends upon a healthy environment. Every effort should
be made to reduce or eliminate sources of environmental pollution.
Responsible use and disposal of hazardous household products is
a positive step toward ensuring a clean environment.
Minimizing
the risks of hazardous products is easy!
There are
simple things that everyone can do to avoid or minimize the risks
of hazardous household products:
- Buy
only what you need. Buying large quantities of a hazardous
substance is not a bargain! Waste will eventually
require disposal, which will cost you or your community money.
- Carefully
read and follow product instructions on use, storage,
and disposal.
- Use
up (instead of throwing out) usable products.
- Keep
unused products in original containers. Store away
from children, pets, and heat sources.
- Reduce
your use of hazardous products around the house. Many
excellent nontoxic and less-toxic alternatives exist, some of
which are mentioned in this publication.
- Recycle!
Antifreeze, motor oil, some batteries and paint are
recyclable in many communities and can be kept out of the waste
stream by delivering to an appropriate recycling program.
- Never
mix hazardous products together!
- Dispose
of hazardous household waste (HHW) properly! Residents
in Clinton County have access to periodic HHW collection events
conducted by Clinton Co. Dept. of Waste Management. See
the list of events to the left of this page, or contact the Department
of Waste Management at 989-224-5186 or waste@clinton-county.org
for information on when and where the next collection will
take place.
- The Ingham
County Health Department, Bureau of Environmental Health and the
Ionia County Resource Recovery Department both act as a State
of Michigan Clean Sweep Site. Agricultural chemicals such
as pesticides, fungicides, herbicides and fertilizers, as well
as any mercury containing product, can be safely disposed of free
of charge through this program. Contact Ingham County at
517-887-4512 or Ionia County at 616-527-8219, to schedule
an appointment.
|