A Community Perspective. UC Berkeley Environmental Sciences/Senior Seminar

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Transcription:

A Community Perspective UC Berkeley Environmental Sciences/Senior Seminar 1983-84

HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES: A COMMUNITY PERSPECTIVE Senior Seminar Doris Sloan, editor Environmental Sciences Group Major May, 1984 University of California, Berkeley

This paper does not necessarily reflect the views of the University of California, Berkeley.

SECTION I HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATION

HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATION ^ DDD r^?tt 3 s n ft-rv/.ft-

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The members of the Senior Seminar wish to thank the following people for contributing their time and assistance to this project: David Belle, Hazardous Waste Manager, Environmental Health and Safety, University of California, Berkeley, CA Michael Belliveau, Research Associate, Citizens for a Better Environment, San Francisco, CA Glen Browning, Berkeley, CA Lee Daneker, Director, Office of Policy and Program Management, Office of Solid Waste, EPA, Washington, D.C. Maura Doherty, Oregon Lung Association, Occupational Health Resource Center, Portland OR Officer William Holian, Walnut Creek Police Department, Walnut Creek, CA Jack Jones, Manager, Public Affairs Division, Dow Chemical U.S.A., Sacramento, CA Tommie Morrison, Science Research Associate, College of Chemistry, Chemistry Department, University of California, Berkeley Mark Posson, Environmental Manager, IT Corporation, Martinez, CA Regina Purin, Health Planner, Golden Empire Health Systems Agency, Sacramento, CA Deborah Robinson, Environmental Protection Specialist, Toxic Waste Branch, EPA, San Francisco, CA Lorene Jackson Russell, M.P.H., Hazardous Materials Specialist, Association of Bay Area Governments, Oakland, CA Cathy Ryan, Toxic Issues Coordinator, Greenpeace U.S.A., San Francisco, CA Tom Shastid, Associate Environmental Engineer, Special Projects Division, East Bay Municipal Utilities District, Oakland, CA Susan Shaw, New Jersey Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides, Boonton, NJ Harold Sinter, Water Resource Control Engineer, Regional Water Quality Control Board, Oakland, CA Scott Stine, Ph.D., Department of Geography, University of California, Berkeley, CA Alyce Ujihara, Office of Solid Waste, EPA, Washington, D.C. Bill Wahbeh, P.E., President, Bay Area Environmental, Richmond, CA Pete S. Williams, Assistant Superintendent, Quality &Environmental Control Division, Chevron, U.S.A. Richmond, CA Our thanks to Craig Wong and Cheryl Swanson for the cover and section drawings. Our thanks also to Eric Mills for typing the manuscripts. - 1 -

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES AT U.C. BERKELEY The Environmental Sciences group major was created in 1970 In response to the need for an undergraduate program that addresses the wide scope of environmental problems. The students' first years in the program are spent acquiring a solid base of knowledge In mathematics, physics, chemistry and biology. In the last two years the emphasis is on the interdependence of environmental effects, on legal parameters and social consequences. The program culminates in the Senior Seminar, a year long group study of a subject of environmental concern. This year's Seminar focused on the Issue of hazardous substances in the community. The following students contributed both their time and effort to this project: Andrew Cohen Janet Naito Janet Crawford Richard Nelson John Dawson Michelle Pappe Barbara Elwell Tim Potter David Finck Jean-Pierre Salgado Kim Fong Carla Schultheis Djon Gentry Cheryl Swanson Lynelle Johnson Greta Kaplan Nancy Knappenberger Stephanie Valentine Craig Wong Nancy Woo Garret Mayer

TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgments i Statement about the Environmental Sciences Group Major iii INTRODUCTION vi1 SECTION I: HAZARDOUS WASTE REGULATION 1 Chapter 1: HAZARDOUS WASTE: OVERVIEW OF FEDERAL AND STATE REGULATIONS - Lynelle Johnson 1 Chapter 2: COOPERATIVE FEDERALISM AND REGULATION OF HAZARDOUS WASTES: CAN WE HAVE BOTH? - Richard L. Nelson 11 Chapter 3: THE HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM IN CALIFORNIA: AN ORGANIZATIONAL ANALYSIS - Craig W. Wong 21 SECTION II: ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS OF HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES 35 Chapter 1: POLLUTANTS AND THEIR EFFECTS ON SAN FRANCISCO BAY WILDLIFE - Stephanie Valentine 35 Chapter 2: METAL POLLUTION IN SAN FRANCISCO BAY SALT MARSH PLANTS - Greta Kaplan 47 Chapter 3: LAYING WASTES TO LAND: PROBLEMS AND FUTURE OUTLOOK OF LAND APPLICATION OF COMPOSTED SEWAGE SLUDGE - David Finck 57 SECTION III: LESSONS FROM LARGE-SCALE HAZARDOUS WASTE GENERATORS 67 Chapter 1: PCBs AND GENERAL ELECTRIC IN OAKLAND - Nancy Woo 67 Chapter 2: STRATEGIES FOR HAZARDOUS WASTE DISPOSAL AT DOW CHEMICAL COMPANY - Jean-Pierre Salgado 77 Chapter 3: CHEVRON USA: AN EXAMINATION OF OIL-WASTEWATER SEPARATION - Garret Mayer 85 SECTION IV: COMMUNITY MANAGEMENT OF HAZARDOUS WASTE FROM SMALL GENERATORS 93 A. HOUSEHOLDS Chapter 1: BERKELEY'S HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE ALTERNATIVES - Nancy Knappenberger 93 Chapter 2: HAZARDOUS HOUSEHOLD CLEANERS: THE NEED FOR ALTERNATIVES - Cheryl Swanson 103 Chapter 3: PREVALENT INSECTICIDES USED IN THE HOUSEHOLD: THEIR HAZARDS AND ALTERNATIVES - Michelle Pappe 115 Chapter 4: HOUSEHOLD AUTOMOTIVE WASTE OIL: GENERATION ANO DISPOSAL - Djon Gentry 127 Chapter 5: THE ROLE OF RECYCLING IN COMMUNITY COLLECTION OF HAZARDOUS WASTE - Andrew Cohen 133 Appendix: BERKELEY HOUSEHOLD SURVEY 147

TABLE OF CONTENTS (continued) B. BUSINESS AND INDUSTRY Chapter 1: HAZARDOUS WASTE GENERATION AND DISPOSAL PRACTICES OF BERKELEY PHOTOFINISHING LABORATORIES - Janet Crawford 149 Chapter 2: HAZARDOUS MATERIALS AND WASTES FROM BERKELEY'S PRINTERS - John Dawson 159 Chapter 3: HAZARDOUS MATERIALS IN BERKELEY'S AUTOMOTIVE GARAGES - Barbara Elwell 167 Chapter 4: HAZARDOUS WASTE GENERATION BY BERKELEY DRY CLEANERS - Janet Naito 175 Chapter 5: BERKELEY MARINA'S TOXIC WASTES: GENERATION AND MITIGATION - Tim Potter 183 Chapter 6: OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH HAZARDS TO NURSERY WORKERS - K1m Fong 193 Appendix: BERKELEY SMALL BUSINESS SURVEY FORM 197 C. THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA CAMPUS Chapter 1: A GUIDE TO THE OISPOSAL OF TOXIC CHEMICALS IN UC BERKELEY LABORATORIES - Carla Schultheis 199 Appendix: MANUAL FOR THE SAFE DISPOSAL OF HAZARDOUS CHEMICAL WASTE 205

INTRODUCTION Hazardous substances are everywhere. In the early 1970s, DDT in mother's milk was found to exceed the legally allowed limit in commercial milk. Now PCB's are present in human fat and milk. Hazardous substances, by their very definition, pose acute and chronic health threats to humans, plants and animals. Examples such as these have drawn public attention to the problem of dealing with hazardous waste in a safe and effective manner. It is essential that we employ better methods of disposal, and that we reduce our reliance upon hazardous substances. Concern over this burgeoning problem prompted participants in this year's seminar to investigate the issue of hazardous substances on a community-wide level. Our research on the disposal of hazardous wastes by large industries disclosed some areas of concern. In particular, we question the policy of "self-monitoring" of pollutant discharge by industrial wastewater generators. We also found that even when the law has clearly ordered reforms in waste handling, compliance is often slow. It appears that our hazardous waste regulatory system is better at creating rules than it is at implementing and enforcing them. Our surveys in the City of Berkeley show that most hazardous waste from small businesses is disposed of properly, and we conclude that the threat to the environment from improperly disposed waste is slight. Occupational exposure to hazardous substances 1s a far greater problem. Owners and workers alike are oblivious to the risks associated with many of the materials they use. As a result, these substances are handled and stored with a casual disregard for simple safety procedures. At the mention of hazardous substances, people invariably think of industrial or agricultural chemicals, of unfamiliar compounds with unpronounceably long names or ominously short abbreviations. It is little known that many common household products are hazardous as well. Our survey of Berkeley's households showed that people are indeed unaware of the dangerous materials in their homes. Moreover, this lack of concern extends beyond workers and homeowners; students and tech nicians at the University of California are inadequately instructed in the safe use and disposal of laboratory chemicals. Hazardous substances are now an integral part of our economy, but their pernicious effects on human health and on the vitality of the environment are becoming increasingly apparent. It behooves all of us to be more alert to the presence of hazardous substances around us; to reduce or eliminate our use of these substances whenever possible; and to provide for their safe handling and proper disposal when their use is unavoidable. - vii -