Climate, Soil, Environmental Concerns

Universal Waste Gets Universal Disposal Rule In California - 2006-02-20

Since 2002, households and small businesses have been exempt from the Golden State's rule that has mandated larger operations properly dispose of what's called "universal waste," but effective Feb. 9, that changed.

It's now illegal in California for households and any other entity to improperly dispose of a new list of widely used, but potentially harmful items containing mercury and other heavy metals that often wound up in garbage pails or recycle bins.

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6016 - Where do you get the most bang for your real estate dollar? The official results of the American property sweepstakes are now in: Home buyers and owners in four states and the District of Columbia racked up average property value gains in excess of 60 percent between 1998 and 2003. Houses in the District of Columbia -- treated as a state for statistical purposes by the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) -- gained an average 78 percent during that five-year period. Homes in Massachusetts gained on average 73 percent, New Hampshire 69 percent, California 68 percent and Rhode Island 61 percent. The national average appreciation gain from 1998-2003 was 38 percent, according to the agency. Put into return-on-investment terms, the gains in the top five states were stunning. For example, a $10,000 downpayment on a $150,000 condo in the District of Columbia in 1998 would have yielded $117,000 in equity gains ($150,000 x 0.78= $117,000) during the following 60 months -- well over 10 times the original investment. Compare that with stock market returns during the same period and you begin to see why so many Americans have moved their focus to real estate. Read this Nemmar Real Estate Training article at Real Estate - State and Local

 

Households must cart universal waste items -- along with a host of hazardous waste, electronic waste and other potentially harmful, everyday items to sanctioned disposal centers.

According to California's Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC), mercury is a neurotoxin when it is released into the environment by improper disposal. Exposure to high levels of mercury can cause permanent brain, kidney and developing fetus damage. Short term exposure may damage lungs and cause nausea, vomiting, increased blood pressure, skin rashes and eye irritation.

What is universal waste?

Most of it is found in products commonly used throughout the home and eventually outlive their useful life cycles. Ironically, some of the items with potentially deadly substances are designed to put a smile on your face.

Novelty items like greeting cards that play music, shoes with lighted soles and certain maze games contain mercury.

Other universal waste items include AA, AAA, C cell, D cell, and button batteries, such as those used in hearing aids and small toys; fluorescent light bulbs, lamps, tubes as well as high intensity discharge (HID), metal halide, sodium and neon bulbs; and certain thermostats and thermometers.

Electronic devices ready for disposal -- also commonly referred to as "e-waste" or "electronic waste" -- also can be universal waste carriers. They include a host of consumer electronics from the era of New Technology, including computer monitors, processors and other computer innards, televisions, cell, cordless and regular telephones, pagers, printers, video cassette recorders (VCRs), radios and microwave ovens.

There are many more. Pilot light sensors, electric switches, barometers, blood pressure devices, stoves, ovens, water heaters, space heaters, clothes dryers, and furnaces frequently use mercury switches. Flammable propellants such as butane can remain in aerosol cans if not completely empty. If a can is marked "flammable" or "toxic" it should not be tossed into the trash unless it is completely empty of all contents.

Most local jurisdictions already have recommendations or rules in place for the proper disposal of universal waste products as well as hazardous waste. Such rules are nearly as ubiquitous as recycle centers.

Like the California law, the rules come with help or instructions for proper disposal.

An aptly named website, Earth 911 is a portal that will direct you to your local universal waste disposal centers as well as recycle and hazardous waste disposal centers while helping you learn which goes where.

California offers the similar Zero Waste California website with similar information for Golden Staters and a partner website eRecycle.org to help hammer home the point.

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