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RLA CONSUMBER COMMITTEE WEBINAR. LEADERSHIP CHAIRPERSON Paul Baum CEO. CO-CHAIRPERSON Kathy Murphy Senior Sales Operations Manager. CO-CHAIRPERSON Tony Sciarrotta President. Agenda 1. Introductions 2. Brief overview by Chairperson 3. Introduction of Presenter 4. Presentation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Presentation by; Jacki Burns

Technical Data Manager from

Titled:BEST PRACTICES IN HAZARDOUS WASTE

MANAGEMENT

RLA CONSUMBER COMMITTEE WEBINARLEADERSHIP CHAIRPERSONPaul BaumCEO

CO-CHAIRPERSONKathy MurphySenior Sales Operations Manager

Agenda

1. Introductions

2. Brief overview by Chairperson

3. Introduction of Presenter

4. Presentation

5. Questions by the audience

CO-CHAIRPERSON Tony Sciarrotta

President

COORDINATORMaria MolinaRLA

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Best Practices in Waste ManagementHow Retailers Are Addressing the Issues of Hazardous Waste and Beyond

Jacki Burns3E Company

October 23, 2013

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Hazardous Waste Exposure

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Waste Determination• Most common hazardous waste violation:

– Failure to determine which wastes are hazardous*

• 40 CFR Section 262.11 – Hazardous Waste Determination: A person who generates a solid waste, must determine if that waste is hazardous

• 40CFR Part 271 – State Authorization: State programs have the option to be more stringent than the Federal Standards

* 2007 Environmental Resource Center Report: Top 10 Hazardous Waste Violations

Notable States :CA, CT, FL, IL, IN, KY, MA, MD, ME, MI, MN, MO, NH, NJ, NY, OR, RI, SC, TX, UT, VT, WA

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Challenges - Retail Product Life Cycle

Supplier

MerchandiseBuyer

Supply ChainRetail Facility

DestroyDonate

or

• Multitude of Suppliers• Obtaining Hazard Data• On-Boarding Process

• Supplier Accountability• On-boarding Visibility• Speed to Market

• Multitude of Locations• Implementing Policy• Consumer Interaction• Brand Image

• Disposition Options• Regulatory Scrutiny

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Hazardous Waste Exposure

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State of Preparedness

Reactionary

Precautionary

Proactive

Trend Setters

Proactive organizations• Implemented systems to collect compliance data• Ways to identify gaps and/or deficiencies in data quality• Methods to evaluate and analyze data for gaps and trends• Some integration with other systems

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Mitigating Risk

Implementing a Comprehensive Program• Identification • Documentation and reporting requirements

assessment• Disposition Guidance• Training• Program Review

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Identification

• Build your chemical and hazardous waste inventory– Cleaners, Detergents, Pesticides– Cosmetics– Pharmaceuticals– Batteries, battery operated devices, and bulbs– E-waste (TVs, computers, consumer electronics)– E-cigarettes, Alcohol over 48 proof– Process waste (parts washing, paint tint, photo)

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Identification

• Hazard Determination– Generator knowledge alone not typically sufficient– SDS a recognized viable reference by state

agencies• Hazardous Constituents and percentages• Hazardous characteristics• Toxicity• Health hazards/warnings

– Testing

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Identification

Supplemental supplier data sometimes needed• Proprietary, Trade Secret, Missing Data• Conflicting data on SDS• “Full disclosure” can confuse what’s needed

for compliance and delay classification

Ingredients

Water , Sodium Laureth Sulfate , Sodium Lauryl Sulfate , Cocamidopropyl Betaine , Cocamide MEA , Hydrolyzed Silk , Olea Europaea (Olive) Fruit OilOlive , Amodimethicone , Benzyl Alcohol , Polyquaternium 10 , Cetrimonium Chloride , Trideceth 12 , Disodium EDTA , Maleic Acid , Sodium Chloride , Glycine , PPG 9 , Methylchloroisothiazolinone , Methylisothiazolinone , Fragrance , Ext D&C Violet 2 (CI 60730)

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Program Development

• What are the labeling requirements for your containers?

• What is your generator status?• What documentation is required?• Who will sign if needed?• What are the reporting requirements in each

state?• Who will file reports if needed?

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Disposition

• Container/Drum/Bucket identification and segregation quickly becoming industry standard

• Distinguish flammable, toxic, corrosive (acid/base), state managed waste

• Other disposition streams:– Vendor buyback/return– Secondary Markets/Donation– Recycling

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Training & Communication

• Coded waste determination available via the scan gun system – New industry standard– Quick/efficient way to communicate with

employees– Posters on-site support the program– Assigned responsibilities (are items staged? Who

can sign?)– What if item doesn’t have designation?

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Technology Trends

• Advancement in technologies driving change• Integrated with ERP systems• Utilization of technologies to move data• Information accessibility & mobile devices

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Program Scope

Comprehensive Single Program Leveraged to Address:

• Damaged Product• Vendor Buybacks• Customer Returns• Expired Product• Regional or nationwide recalls• Unknown/dumped waste

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Program Review

• Gaps– Reconciliation– Employee Support– Phase 2 Waste – no codes, but not acceptable as

trash • Opportunities

– Markdowns of hazmat– Expand other disposition options to control costs– “Green” product selection

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

Program Review

• Annual Review– Programs costs (disposal costs, training)– Total waste generated– Hit ratio of classified vs non-classified– Support solutions – cost effective? Filling all gaps?– Waste Reduction

• Are all potential waste sources addressed?• Is solution meeting all organizational needs?

©2010, 3E Company, All Rights Reserved

3E Company Solutions

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Moving Forward

Contact Information:Judd W. DagueDistrict ManagerJDague@3ECompany.com760-602-8665 office760-473-0240 cell

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