Schools Chemical Cleanout Campaign Recognition Recipient
Accomplishments
October
22, 2009
Alabama
Department of Environmental Management
Montgomery, AL
The
Alabama Department of Environmental Management is being recognized for
providing chemical removal services and chemical management guidance to
the state=92s K-12 schools. The agency has provided safe storage
guidance; lab packed and removed waste chemicals for proper treatment
and disposal; promoted micro-scale chemistry; and promoted partnering
with Alabama Science in Motion, which has supplied lab chemicals and
equipment and removed unused chemicals, experiment wastes, and unneeded
equipment. The agency=92s work has resulted in 8,640 pounds of
waste chemicals removed from 36 Alabama schools. The Alabama
Department of Environmental Management also coordinated with Alabama
Science in Motion to respond to an emergency request to assist a school
with the cleanup, removal, and disposal of chemicals after the
school was damaged by a tornado.
Ash Grove
Cement Company
Overland
Park, MO
Ash Grove
Cement Company is being recognized for their participation in a recent
United We Serve: Schools Chemical Cleanout Campaign project in
Grandview, Missouri. Ash Grove made a generous donation to cover the
cost of removing unwanted, unneeded, and excessive chemicals from
Grandview Middle and High Schools. Ultimately, the chemical
cleanout resulted in nearly 500 pounds of chemicals removed from the
schools, including toxics, flammables, corrosives, and caustics.
The success of this endeavor has inspired Ash Grove Cement Company
to encourage other company sites to get involved in their local
schools.
BASF
Corporation=97White Stone Facility
Spartanburg, SC
BASF-Whitestone is being recognized for their assistance to
Spartanburg, South Carolina high schools. BASF evaluated the high
schools=92 chemical laboratory equipment and removed outdated, broken,
and unreliable apparatus. In addition, company personnel provided
guidance and assistance with obtaining appropriate chemical laboratory
items to replace the old equipment. BASF has also worked with the
schools to provide teacher training in responsible chemical management
practices that can be implemented in schools.
Cadence Environmental Energy
Michigan City, IN
Cadence
Environmental Energy is being recognized for their participation in a
recent United We Serve event in Grandview, Missouri. Cadence
worked closely with Ash Grove Cement Company to provide support
services, including hazardous waste laboratory analysis for materials
coming to Ash Grove from Grandview schools. As a supply manager,
the time and resources they donated to Ash Grove and PCI/Tradebe enabled
the efficient and effective completion of the project. Also,
through applying innovative technology, Cadence continually works with
Ash Grove and other cement companies to minimize the use of fossil fuels
by maximizing the use of alternative fuels, such as the materials from
the Grandview clean up. As Cadence continues to collaborate with other
SC3 partners, they will ensure that chemicals removed from these schools
are managed in the safest and most appropriate manner.
Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, Environmental Protection
Department
Eagle
Butte, SD
The
Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Environmental Protection Department is being
recognized for their work to remove unwanted, unneeded, and outdated
chemicals from Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation schools. The
department gained the support, cooperation, and participation of school
administrators and staff, which facilitated efforts to identify unsafe
chemical situations and harmful chemicals. The department
facilitated chemical inventories and worked with an SC3 charter partner,
who donated their services to safely lab pack and collect chemicals for
shipment and proper disposal. A total of 1,515 pounds of chemicals
were removed from schools, including: neurotoxins, carcinogens, toxic,
ignitable, and shock sensitive chemicals.
The Dow Chemical Company
Midland, MI
The Dow
Chemical Company is being recognized for their participation in an SC3
project with K-12 schools in the vicinity of Saginaw, Michigan. In
2006, Dow Chemical Company partnered with EPA Region 5 and the Michigan
Department of Environmental Quality to train teachers from 36 middle and
high schools in responsible chemical management, and removed more than
3,600 pounds of hazardous, unneeded, and outdated laboratory chemicals
from 32 schools. In 2007, a similar project was carried out in
K-12 schools near Ann Arbor, Michigan. =46rom these projects, Dow
developed a flow chart to facilitate the development of corporate,
state, and federal partnerships to improve chemical management in K-12
schools that they will continue to share with other corporations
embarking on SC3 projects.
EMC
Insurance Companies
Des
Moines, IA
EMC
Insurance Companies is being recognized for providing responsible
chemical management solutions to Iowa schools. EMC Insurance
Companies negotiated cost-effective disposal services for schools to
facilitate chemical cleanouts. Additionally, they provided
free-of-charge education to teachers, staff, and administrators on
proper management of their chemical stocks and prevention of hazardous
situations. Their efforts have resulted in the removal of more
than 250,000 pounds of hazardous chemicals from approximately 320
schools, and they have conducted 50-100 training sessions. EMC
Insurance Companies involvement with SC3 projects in Iowa has made
schools safer and healthier for students, teachers, and staff across the
state.
The
Missouri Center for Safe Schools (MCSS)
Kansas City, MO
The
Missouri Center for Safe Schools at UMKC is being recognized for their
dedication to responsible chemical management in K-12 schools throughout
Missouri. The center provides technical assistance to schools,
engages in outreach to promote the SC3 program, and maintains a web site
with SC3 resources. In 2008, the center partnered with the
Missouri Department of Natural Resources to do a statewide school
chemical cleanout. =46rom February 2008 to June 2009, 50,134
pounds of chemicals were removed from 227 Missouri
schools.
Peaks to
Prairies Pollution Prevention Information Center, Montana State
University
Bozeman,
MT
The Peaks to Prairies Pollution Prevention
Center is being recognized for their support of the Cheyenne River Sioux
Tribe Environmental Protection Department in their school chemical
cleanout project. Peaks to Prairies Pollution Prevention
Information Center applied grant funding for school chemical cleanout
activities to Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation schools with a focus on
chemical inventories, cost estimates, and chemical collection. The
center also worked to locate funding sources and obtain funds for the
chemical cleanouts. Future activities include holding workshops,
teacher education, and staff training on responsible chemical
management.
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
Harrisburg, PA
The
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection is being recognized
for their participation in an SC3 pilot project that has benefited ten
Pennsylvania schools. The agency provided resources to enable the
schools to perform their own chemical inventories; developed, in
collaboration with EPA Region 3 staff, a lessons-learned report that
gives recommendations on proper chemical management in schools; and
disseminated the reports to all Pennsylvania school districts. As
a result of the pilot project, over 5,600 pounds of chemicals were
removed from the schools, including toxic, flammable, and corrosive
chemicals.
Tradebe
Pollution Control Industries (PCI)
East Chicago, IN
Pollution
Control Industries (or PCI) is being recognized for the support they
provided to the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Environmental Protection
Department in their school chemical cleanout project. The company
offered $26,000 worth of free services to the Cheyenne River Sioux
Reservation schools to collect and dispose of the toxic and hazardous
chemicals. PCI removed, shipped, and properly disposed of 1,515
pounds of chemicals at their treatment, storage, and disposal facility
in Indiana.