Overall Rating Bronze - expired
Overall Score 38.80
Liaison Sarah Laurie
Submission Date May 7, 2014
Executive Letter Download

STARS v2.0

State University of New York at Fredonia
OP-25: Hazardous Waste Management

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 0.75 / 1.00 Sarah Laurie
Environmental Safety and Sustainability Specialist; PR Subcommittee Chair; ACUPCC liaison
Environmental Health & Safety
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

Does the institution have strategies in place to safely dispose of all hazardous, special (e.g. coal ash), universal, and non-regulated chemical waste and seek to minimize the presence of these materials on campus?:
Yes

A brief description of steps taken to reduce hazardous, special (e.g. coal ash), universal, and non-regulated chemical waste:

A chemical inventory database is being implemented to better track the types and quantities of all chemicals on campus. In preparation for the move to a new science building in 2013, all science departments are cleaning out old and unnecessary stock.


A brief description of how the institution safely disposes of hazardous, universal, and non-regulated chemical waste:

A RCRA/DOT trained staff member does routine inspections of all chemical storage areas, and works with a licensed chemical waste company to properly package and ship all waste off-site.


A brief description of any significant hazardous material release incidents during the previous three years, including volume, impact and response/remediation:

There have been zero hazardous waste material releases.


A brief description of any inventory system employed by the institution to facilitate the reuse or redistribution of laboratory chemicals:
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Does the institution have or participate in a program to responsibly recycle, reuse, and/or refurbish all electronic waste generated by the institution?:
Yes

Does the institution have or participate in a program to responsibly recycle, reuse, and/or refurbish electronic waste generated by students?:
No

A brief description of the electronic waste recycling program(s):

The program consist of when we receive notification and/or electronic equipment for disposal:

1. Other departments on campus are notified on exactly what is available and if they would like/need the usable equipment.

2. If no response, then all equipment is offered to all SUNY Campuses for their reuse.

3. If there are no responses from the other campuses, then the equipment is offered to all state agencies first, then all counties, cities, villages, etc, of the state for their reuse.

4. If no responses, then it is either put up for sale on E-bay by OGS and sold or given loc al disposition and the a electronic recycler is called in to dispose/reuse the equipment. The recycler we use, makes use of all equipment for resale first then dismantling for recycling. No electronic waste ends into the landfill.

If the equipment is non-useable then it goes directly to the recycler for proper dismantling and recycling of all parts


A brief description of steps taken to ensure that e-waste is recycled responsibly, workers’ basic safety is protected, and environmental standards are met:

A C-7 form is issued by the recycling entity, stating all electronics have been properly recycled.
Employees are trained on the hazards of electronic equipment as well as proper lifting.


The website URL where information about the institution’s hazardous and electronic-waste recycling programs is available:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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