10% Bleach Solution Labels
Printable labels for 10% bleach solutions
How to manage, store, and dispose of chemical and hazardous waste.
All hazardous waste, including hazardous chemical waste, must be properly managed to protect people and the environment.
Hazardous waste meets either of these criteria:
Hazardous waste is subject to strict regulations and must follow specific management and handling practices. This includes:
A material is subject to hazardous waste regulations once it will no longer be used for its intended purpose.
Common hazardous and chemical waste at Harvard includes:
It also includes unused hazardous materials and chemicals like aerosol cans, paint, pesticides, and strong acids and bases that you cannot use anymore for reasons like:
Common hazardous and chemical waste in labs includes:
It also includes unused reagents and chemicals that the lab cannot use anymore for reasons like:
You must complete training before generating, handling, inspecting, or managing hazardous waste.
EHS conducts hazardous waste training online through the Harvard Training Portal (HTP). Certain EHS general safety courses also include hazardous waste training.
After your first training, you must complete follow-up training each year.
Ensure your facility or lab staff complete sufficient training and have training records.
Always use waste minimization techniques to limit and reduce the volume and toxicity of hazardous waste. This includes:
Satellite accumulation areas (SAA) are locations where you collect hazardous waste. Each SAA must:
Main accumulation areas (MAA) are designated waste storage areas with longer term storage time limitations than SAAs and additional requirements.
Keep containers closed unless you are adding or removing waste:
Lab or facilities staff typically generate waste into containers.
Label each waste container with a Harvard standardized hazardous waste label. Harvard labels meet federal and local regulatory requirements.
To label waste containers:
Request waste labels by submitting a chemical waste service request or contacting EHS.
Search for hazard designations by chemical as needed.
When a waste container is full:
A Harvard hazardous waste vendor must remove the container from the SAA within three days of the date on the label.
Only licensed facilities can dispose of hazardous waste.
Never pour hazardous or chemical waste down a sink drain. Search for sink disposal requirements by chemical as needed.
You need a permit to transport hazardous waste on public roads.
Find documents and online tools to manage hazardous and chemical waste.
Printable labels for 10% bleach solutions
Chemical safety requirements and guidelines for labs, including lab chemical standard operating procedures (SOP)
Printable poster to check if you can pour chemical waste into a sink drain
Common chemical waste hazard designations and sink disposal requirements
Construction hazardous materials and hazardous waste management requirements
Construction Safety Standard Specification (Section 026000) to remove miscellaneous hazardous materials
Lab chemical storage guidelines, groups, and locations
Weekly hazardous waste storage satellite accumulation area (SAA) inspections
Dispose of waste by pouring it into sinks and drains
Printable poster about wastewater discharge and sink disposal requirements
Harvard-approved waste disposal facilities
Request waste pickups and supplies
Contact EHS for more information about chemical and hazardous waste, including:
Contact lab_safety@harvard.edu or your Lab Safety Advisor (LSA) for more information about waste in labs.