There is some truth to this. My brother in law worked for a dump company and he said most of the time all the recycle bins we had in the city on garbage day went in the dump in the same place as the garbage, it didn't get separated. He never separated his garbage from recycles as it was a waste of time. Now some of our garbage trucks have cameras on them so you get a fine if they catch you.Whether you have it carted off by people in hazmat suits or just toss it in the trash, it will have the same effect. None whatsoever.
That’s very true. They started putting cameras in when people dumping tires and mattresses really was a problem not long ago. When they dump it at the dump, any of these things would be seen and they audit the trucks. So anything liquid, bulk waste, tires, mattresses etc would cause thatThere is some truth to this. My brother in law worked for a dump company and he said most of the time all the recycle bins we had in the city on garbage day went in the dump in the same place as the garbage, it didn't get separated. He never separated his garbage from recycles as it was a waste of time. Now some of our garbage trucks have cameras on them so you get a fine if they catch you.
Find a local hazardous waste company. They will drop off a 55 gallon drum. You call when its full and they come swap it out. We used to do the litter deal but with 9 printers now that was taking too long. I think the last time they picked up we paid $350.00 for the disposal.I wasn't able to find a thread that had been started. Just wondering what you all do with waste ink? Are there any companies that handle it or do you just turn it in at recycling events?
Thank you.
Until you get reported or caught, the. They will shut you down, fine you and you get to spend the next foreseeable future under the microscope. Maybe hold back opinions when someone is searching for actual advise
That is a very common issue with old dryclean sites. The chemical used was called PERC.About 200 yards from my shop, there was a dry cleaning shop in the 80's where the owner poured waste dry cleaning chemicals down the septic system drain. The area around that shop is still a EPA superfund site and the dry cleaning owner might still be doing time.
Right now all those chemicals are rising back to the surface and there is a greenhouse type structure over the area to capture and clean the vapors, put in by the EPA
EPA is out here a few times per year, I make sure to save my waste ink and take to proper chem disposal
https://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/S...fuseaction=second.Cleanup&id=0605460#bkground
"The source of Site contamination is the former Bell Dry Cleaners facility, which was located within the Cypress Shopping Center at 11600 Jones Road, approximately one-half mile north of the intersection of Jones Road and FM 1960, outside the city limits of northwest Houston, Texas. The Cypress Shopping Center was constructed in 1984, and the former Bell facility began dry cleaning operations sometime in 1988. The former Bell facility continued operating through May 2002 when the dry cleaning operations were shut down. The hazardous substances present at the Site include tetrachloroethylene, also known as perchloroethylene (PCE), and related breakdown products, trichloroethylene (TCE), 1,2-dichloroethylene (DCE), and vinyl chloride (VC)."