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Kansas City Royals / Waste Management / Proper disposal of batteries, electronics, and hazardous waste When batteries, electronics, and other potentially hazardous wastes are improperly disposed, they can harm public health and the environment. Visit the Missouri Recycling Services Directory for a list of recycling service providers, and contact your own waste haulers to learn more about the services they provide. For help in setting up your recycling programs, contact Bridging the Gap at 816-561-1087 and ask about their consulting services. For a database of waste management resources searchable by material, visit RecycleSpot. Also consider joining the EPA’s free WasteWise program, which provides members with several benefits, including a technical assistance team that will help you to conduct a waste audit and reduce waste. For listings of hazardous waste service providers near Kansas City, visit Earth 911’s Business Resources directory and the Environmental Yellow Pages. You may also want to consider incorporating language into future contracts with suppliers of electronics equipment, specifying that they take back these hard to dispose of products at the end of their use for recycling and environmentally responsible disposal. Sample electronics take-back contract languageEnvironmental Benefits
Batteries and electronic waste (e-waste) constitute one of the most important portions of an office waste stream to manage safely. Batteries and e-waste – such as computers, printers, and cell phones – contain toxic heavy metals such as lead, mercury, and cadmium. When they are thrown away in the trash, they end up in landfills, and these toxic compounds can drain into soils and waters, polluting lakes and streams and making the water unfit for drinking, swimming, fishing, and wildlife. Additional Resources
EPA – Hazardous WasteOSHA – Hazardous Waste |
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