By
Bonnie Coblentz GREENWOOD
-- More than 100 Leflore County homes are safer places after
families safely disposed of household hazardous wastes, but
experts say hazardous waste remains in houses around the
state. Leflore
County held a household hazardous waste roundup the last
weekend in April. Lacey Henderson, Leflore County home
economist with Mississippi State University's Extension
Service, said 125 families brought waste products from the
house that, if not properly disposed of, are dangerous to
the environment. "Public
awareness is up about the dangers of these waste items,"
Henderson said. "Almost everybody is learning more about
what they should not throw away and what can be
recycled." Paint
and tires were the most common items brought in that weekend
in Greenwood. Chip Rogers, an environmental scientist at the
Department of Environmental Quality in Jackson, said an
estimated 625 gallons of waste paint were
collected. Other
items disposed of were about 150 gallons of oil, 10 to 20
appliances, and smaller amounts of antifreeze, pesticides,
insecticides, mineral spirits and drain cleaners. Rogers
said for 10 weekends each in the spring and fall, DEQ
conducts household hazardous waste roundups around the
state. DEQ provides grants for these events, and the
government branch holding the event must meet 25 percent of
the cost with credit for donations, volunteer labor and
more. "No city
or county has had to pay anything out-of-pocket for the
household collection days unless they wanted to," Rogers
said. Dr.
Jimmy Bonner, specialist with the Extension Environmental
Education Unit, said all hazardous wastes are a problem in
the state because Mississippi doesn't have a licensed
hazardous waste disposal site. "The key
to managing these wastes is to buy only the amount you can
use over a reasonable period of time. Avoid the tendency to
overstock the products that may become a hazardous waste
disposal problem to you," Bonner said. "If neighbors or
friends can use a leftover product, try to give it to them,
because that's better than allowing it to become a hazardous
waste." Another
way to prevent a household hazardous waste problem is to buy
environmentally-friendly products. The
Federal Hazardous Substances Act defines items with the
words ignitable, corrosive, explosive, reactive, toxic or
radioactive as hazardous. "That's
many of the products in the bathroom, under the kitchen sink
or in the storage shed," Bonner said. Empty
products are no longer a hazardous waste and can be disposed
of normally. Released:
May 4, 1998
Community
News
Make Homes Safer
From Hazardous Waste
Contact: Dr. Jimmy Bonner, (601) 325-3155
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:16
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