Ohio State University Fact Sheet
Community Development
700 Ackerman Road, Suite 235, Columbus, OH 43202-1578
Disposal Of Household Hazardous Materials
CDFS-102
Joe E. Heimlich
One of the most controversial subjects of our time is hazardous
waste. Where it goes has been central to many long legal battles.
Often, people forget that every household contributes to hazardous
waste.
Individually, the waste that is hazardous may seem insignificant,
but in the aggregate....Picture, for example, a city of 50,000; if
every household contributes an average of five gallons of hazardous
material to the solid waste stream each year, there would be over
250,000 gallons of waste each year which would convert to roughly 41
1/3 tons of hazardous waste per year. Whether cleansers, paints,
batteries, or motor oil, household hazardous waste should be of grave
concern to all citizens.
Each person has options available to them for reducing their
dependency on hazardous materials, using less, and careful disposal.
This fact sheet will briefly discuss the current "best" means of
disposing of household hazardous waste.
Step One: Read the Label
Some hazardous materials indicate proper disposal techniques on
their labels. Unfortunately, these are in a minority and some of the
containers that do indicate disposal techniques fail to go far enough.
If disposal directions are not present on the label of a material
known to be hazardous, the label will indicate contents, solubility,
or corrosive/reactive potential through the warnings or cautions on
the container.
These warnings could include the following:
- "Wear gloves" is a sign of corrosive or dermally toxic
substances.
- "Do not store near heat or open flame" suggests ignitability.
- "Do not store near..." indicates reactive qualities of the
material.
- "Use only in well ventilated room" is used for toxic fumes
and reactive chemicals.
These and similar clues on the label will present a wise consumer
with information necessary for proper disposal of the material.
An important note: Even when a container is "empty," it
is rarely "empty" of all chemicals. There
is some liquid that the pump won't spray and there is nearly
always chemical residual on the sides and bottom of the container.
Careful attention to disposal is imperative.
Step Two: Use and Reuse as Much as Possible
Often, there's just that "little bit" left over from a job and it
does not seem to be enough to bother saving. What to do? Attempt to
use all of any hazardous material. If you don't need it, perhaps a
neighbor might.
Some solvents and cleaners (like paint thinner) can be
reused--store the cleaner in a covered jar and when the paint has
settled, strain and reuse (see below for the disposal of the sludge).
Some hazardous materials are recyclable; motor oil and fuel oils
are often collected by service stations for filtering and reuse.
Although the complete use of a product is wise, give leftover products
to others only if the material is in its original container with the
label intact. Any "precautionary" information that may have
accompanied the container should also be given to the new user.
Step Three: Select Disposal Approach
- First and foremost, never burn or dump any hazardous wastes on the
ground.
- Do not dispose of any hazardous material "down the sink" unless you
are sure it can safely be disposed into the sewer system. "Down the
sink" includes letting hazardous materials run down the sewer system
(draining an auto's oil into the gutter system or excessive water
runoff from a pesticide treated yard) or down the toilet. If you have
a septic tank, additional care must be taken.
- Avoid burying any containers or leftover chemicals.
- Do not mix hazardous wastes and do not collect containers and
chemicals to dispose of them at one time.
- Solidify any liquid wastes. This involves using an absorbent
material (sawdust, kitty litter, paper towels, rags) to soak up a
liquid hazardous material. Do not solidify more than one chemical at a
time. Using gloves, sweep or dispose of the material into a plastic
bag, and then dispose of with other household garbage.
- Use this same process with any "empty" container other than an
aerosol container. It is often good to "open" a non- aerosol container
with wire cutters or scissors and air-dry; wearing gloves, swab the
inside before disposal. Dispose of the rags or paper towels after they
have aired outside.
- Latex paint can be solidified by exposing the paint to air. When
dried, the paint and container can be disposed with household refuse.
Wrap empty containers in several layers of newspaper prior to
disposal. This prevents environmental contamination and reactive
potential.
- With aerosol cans, turn the container upside down and depress spray
button, with nozzle facing paper toweling, rags or any absorbent
surface. When the spray has lost pressure, wrap the can in several
layers of newspaper and dispose with household refuse.
- Some cleansers can be poured down a drain. If you have a septic
tank, drain disposal should nearly always be avoided. If cleansers are
designed to be used with water in a home or in sinks, showers, toilet
bowls, and tubs, the material is probably drain disposable. Let the
water run, rinse the container and slowly pour the water/chemical down
the drain. Allow the water to continue running after the chemical is
gone. Allow the container to air dry (or swab with paper towels), wrap
in newspaper and dispose in household refuse.
- Antifreeze can be flushed down the toilet if connected to a sewer
system.
- Pesticides, herbicides, oil paints, paint cleaners, and oil and
transmission fluids should never be flushed into a water system or
disposed of on ground or put into household refuse.
- Automobile batteries should never be added to a home's garbage. Some
communities have hazardous waste material collection systems for some
of these wastes.
In many cases, disposal is difficult at best and the preferred
solution is to
- use an alternative material
- recycle where possible (oil and batteries) or
- use the material completely, then solidify residual and dispose of
the container as described above.
In our society, hazardous waste is guaranteed. We use many chemicals
daily at home, at play, and at work. Wise purchase, use, storage and
disposal of necessary chemicals can greatly reduce the negative
environmental impact of these chemicals. Finding effective
alternatives to their use avoids the creation of hazardous wastes from
the home.
All educational programs conducted by Ohio State University Extension
are available to clientele on a nondiscriminatory basis without regard
to race, color, creed, religion, sexual orientation, national origin,
gender, age, disability or Vietnam-era veteran status.
Keith L. Smith, Associate Vice President for Ag. Adm. and
Director, OSU Extension.
TDD No. 800-589-8292 (Ohio only) or 614-292-1868
| Ohioline
| Search
| Fact Sheets
| Bulletins
|