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University of Toronto Scarborough January 31, 2012 Rob Provost, BSc Manager, Environmental Protection Office of Environmental Health and Safety Hazardous.

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Presentation on theme: "University of Toronto Scarborough January 31, 2012 Rob Provost, BSc Manager, Environmental Protection Office of Environmental Health and Safety Hazardous."— Presentation transcript:

1 University of Toronto Scarborough January 31, 2012 Rob Provost, BSc Manager, Environmental Protection Office of Environmental Health and Safety Hazardous Waste Management

2 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Objectives  Minimize amounts of waste produced for disposal  To be able to SAFELY handle chemical, radioactive and biological wastes produced as a result of research and teaching activities  Know who Environmental Protection Services (EPS) are  To know where to get the information you need on hazardous waste disposal

3 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Waste Minimization In 2010 U of T produced : 143,000 Kg of Chemical waste, costing $ 311,000 to disposal of. 22 m 3 (~25,000 kg) of Radioactive waste, costing $ 175,000 to disposal of. 95,000 Kg of Biological waste How can you help?  Purchasing practices  Process modification [less chemicals used or even eliminated]  Not mixing with hazardous wastes  Substitution - less hazardous alternatives ? – E.g. mercury thermometers replaced with alcohol or electronic

4 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Regulations  All Chemical Waste generation is controlled by the Ministry of the Environment (MOE)  The University has around 64 different generator registrations and each have different waste classes registered

5 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Waste Generators  Each waste generators site has a Waste Generator number (eg. ON0179424)  Waste Classes (eg. 263A, 252L, 331I)  Is specific to an address and site description

6 Office of Environmental Health and Safety What Waste is in your area?  Do you have Chemical waste produced in your area? What types?  Do you have Radiation waste produced in your area? What types?  Do you have Biological waste produced in your area? What types?  Do you know how your waste is handled?  Do you know who to contact for it?

7 Office of Environmental Health and Safety U of T General Requirements Waste handling has the following requirements:  Packaging  Labelling  Storage  Disposal

8 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Typical Chemical Lab Hazards  Flammable  Corrosive  Toxic  Reactives At U of T the most common composition in the research labs is: 75% solvents (most common hazard encountered in labs) 10% acids 15% others such as toxins, bases, oxidiziers etc.

9 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Packaging  Never mix incompatible materials Fire/Explosion Spill

10 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Packaging  Sealed containers  Reuse old chemical containers

11 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Packaging  Liquid Waste containers should only be fill to 75% of capacity to allow for expansion  Central Stores has green pails for Chemical Waste collection

12 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Labelling  EPS supplies these labels to the University  Dropped off the Central Stores Area

13 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Storage - Local Conditions Some chemicals can become problems by degrading and producing hazardous by- products with:  long storage (e.g. ethers degrade to from unstable organic peroxides)  exposure to water or air (e.g. sodium metal is a solid and stable but when immersed in water produces very flammable hydrogen gas)

14 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Storage  Waste should be segregated according to compatibility  dispose of ageing containers promptly  DON’T use Bio bags or Radiation bags to collect spill materials or leaking containers!!  Unknowns??

15 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Storage FUMEHOODS They are a safety device for the protection of laboratory personnel and not as storage areas Defeats the purpose of having a fumehood

16 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Disposal  Lab staff responsible for removing chemical waste from lab area to : Central Waste Holding Facility near Central Stores In the case of a Lab Clean-out we may send a Tech to evaluate the job

17 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Storage Central Waste Facility

18 Office of Environmental Health and Safety What happens to my Chemicals??  Segregated  Labpacked  TDGA Labels  Loaded

19 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Disposal – Lab Pickups  Plan ahead!!  Chemical Waste can go to the Central Facility during receiving dock hours  Call-in required for p/u from individual lab  Contractor only on campus 1 day ever couple months!

20 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Disposal – Lab Cleanout Lab Closures (includes moving or renos) require several weeks to properly deal with potentially hazardous materials. Scheduling Contractors and packaging of the hazardous materials also requires time. 1.Radioactive- Radiation Protection Services (416-978-2028) to arrange for proper decommissioning. 2.Biological- Biosafety Office (416-978-3981) so that the hazard potential may be assessed. 3.Chemical- Environmental Protection Services (416-978-7000) to arrange for the proper disposal of chemicals. 4.Furniture and Room Clean Out- Campus Services (416-287-7383) to initiate the removal of all remaining equipment and materials. http://www.ehs.utoronto.ca/services/environmental/labdecom.htm

21 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Disposal – Lab Cleanout Removal of Chemicals for a lab cleanout should be requested at least 3 week in advance! Chemical Technician will visit the site to review  what NEEDS to be removed  What supplies are need to DO the pickup  check that NO OTHER HAZARDS will affect the pickup Eg. Debris obstructing access to waste

22 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Chemical Waste Handling Personal Protective Equipment  The same precautions for handling hazardous chemicals are applied to chemical wastes  eye protection  lab coats  gloves

23 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Special Cases: Gas Cylinders  Treat as high energy sources  Use smallest size required to do work  Try to use local suppliers  Use returnable cylinders (check before buying)  If supplier unable to accept contact EHS office www.ehs.utoronto.ca/services/environmental/gascyldispl.htm

24 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Special Case Chemically-contaminated sharps  Chemicals in trace amounts are to be collected in U of T approved yellow sharps containers  chemicals drained from sharps prior  significant amount of chemical contamination, first deactivated in accordance with MSDS  Take to Central Waste Holding Facility to place in Bio-Totes

25 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management  At U of T, researchers working with any radioactive material, require an internal permit approved by UTRPA, BEFORE work begins.  Only approved permit holders are able to order radioactive materials and must be knowledgeable in University procedures for disposal.

26 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Definition Includes: – surplus radioactive material – materials that has come into contact with radioactive materials (e.g. gloves, flasks) – used in decontamination (e.g., sponges) – contaminated equipment that cannot be cleaned

27 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radiation Waste Minimization  Process modification - new less toxic absorbent material used  Not mixing non hazardous with radioactive wastes  developed a delay and decay program for short-lived isotopes

28 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management  Short-lived wastes (< 90 days half life) are allowed to decay in a secure University facility until no longer radioactive then disposed as non radioactive waste.  Long-lived wastes (> 90 day half life) are sent for disposal to permitted facilities. Wastes moved to S-101 by a Lab Technicians.

29 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Packaging  Liquid and solid waste MUST be segregated  containers provided by EHS  Liquid container should be filled to full capacity to maximize absorbent’s potential  Waste packaged in containers that improperly ID other existing hazards  Do not place non rad waste with rad waste

30 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Labelling Waste not properly labelled will not be removed!! Labels provided free by EHS * Type of label depends on type of waste.

31 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Labelling - Solid

32 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Labelling - Liquid

33 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Labelling - Liquid Green label < 30 days (e.g. P-32, P-33, I- 131, Cr-51) Blue label 30> Half life< 90 days (e.g. S-35, I-60) SEGREGATED BY HALF-LIFE OF ISOTOPE Yellow label > 90 days (e.g. C-14, H-3)

34 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Storage  Each lab should establish one clearly identified location for waste, preferable close to work done with radioactive materials.  Waste should not be stored underneath any working area or near vicinity of people who do not work with radioactive materials.

35 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Special Cases  Animal Carcasses  Gas Chromatographs  Gaseous Radioactive Waste  Liquid Scintillation Counting Vials (separate Glass and Plastic Vials)  Liquid Scintillation Counters  Fridges, freezers or other equipment  Sealed sources  Shipping materials

36 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Radioactive Waste Management Special Cases Needles and Blades  for trace amounts, disposed into special yellow plastic containers approved by U of T and CSA for the disposal of such waste  liquids drained into appropriate colour-coded jars and separately treated as radioactive waste  sharps with significant quantities of an isotope must be disposed as RADIOACTIVE WASTE into separate jars.  Take to S-101 for disposal

37 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Biowaste Management Service provided to Biosafety certified Containment Level 2 & 3 Labs  The Central Waste Holding Facility has Bio- Totes setup to collect this waste  Biowaste includes biohazardous material, contaminated solids, glass, blades, needles and tips NOTE: Some other labs will need Needle drop offs without a Biosafety Certificate

38 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Biowaste Management Packaging Needles and Blades  disposed into special yellow plastic containers approved by U of T and CSA for the disposal of such waste  Fill only to indicated fill-line  Put lid on before offering for disposal  Place with in the Bio-Totes

39 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Biowaste Management Biosafety certified Containment Level 1 Labs :  Waste can go directly to Regular garbage  Should the lab staff wish to autoclave before disposal use the clear unlabelled autoclave bags  Needles and blades should be take to Central Waste Holding Facility to be placed in Bio-Totes

40 Office of Environmental Health and Safety More Info U of T - Office of Environmental Health and Safety Laboratory Hazardous Waste Management Manual www.ehs.utoronto.ca/Resources/wmindex.htm Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) -for specific chemical (especially for incompatible mixtures)

41 Office of Environmental Health and Safety Enviromental Protection Services Contact List email: hazwaste.ehs@utoronto.ca phone: (416) 978-7000 for Information (416) 946-3473 for Pickup and Supplies fax: (416) 971-1361


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