Showing posts with label Health and Safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health and Safety. Show all posts

October 10, 2012


On Thursday, September 27, 2012 the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) released a 60-page chemical management toolkit to assist Arizona school districts in managing chemicals used at schools.

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ranks responsible chemical management as a top priority for schools, stating that many school buildings "contain environmental conditions that inhibit learning and pose increased risks to the health of children and staff."

English version 

The EPA provides information and resources on its own healthy schools chemical management website.

The EPA video on the SC3 campaign to clean up chemicals in schools provides an in-depth look at the many places chemicals can be found in and outside the chemistry lab, and the process of removal in several schools in the US.


July 28, 2012

Safety Culture Goes Far Beyond Work
Canadian Occupational Safety - February 2010
By: Shawn Galloway, ProAct Safety
... If we can help all employees recognize early-on how safety applies to the things they care about most, we create not only a safety conscious culture, we help the culture create safer families and communities.

Read the article.

June 01, 2012

Training Workshop on Preventing Chemical Accidents

On Thursday, June 7, 2012 from 8:00 AM – 4:00 p.m. ET the Rutgers University Busch Campus Center in Piscataway, N.J. will host a training workshop on preventing chemical accidents. The goal is to create an effective worker-management health and safety committee that can provide a safe venue for workers to report health, safety, and maintenance issues and resolve health and safety problems to prevent accidents and workplace injuries. This workshop is for individuals and safety committee members employed in the chemical and oil sector and use highly hazardous chemicals. Pre-registration is required.

February 28, 2012

PRIDE OF PURPOSE, PRIDE OF PLACE 

Superintendent Harold Cowley of Yantis ISD is a 2012 Healthy Kids Healthy Schools Hero for his extraordinary leadership and dedication to the safety and well-being of the children and teachers in Yantis, TX. 

Superintendent Cowley is highly qualified to be chief administrator of a modern school system because of a special combination of his values as well as his technical knowledge and skills. 

Cowley’s background includes being a chemist and then a vocational agriculture teacher before moving into roles in the central office. He became an elementary principal, then an assistant superintendent of finance, then superintendent for two different districts before retiring after 35 years. After an extended retirement, he got called to provide leadership to Yantis ISD.

Before accepting the Superintendent position in 2005, he took two days to go through the schools and gave the school board two pages of necessary improvements.  Since then he has been a resource and mentor to the school community, maintaining high standards with ongoing inspections, surveillance and problem prevention.  

The benefit of his approach is the admiration and respect of his staff and community as well as an increase in attendance and reduction in staff turnover.  The current attendance rate is 97%. In the past the school had a 40% staff turnover rate.  He lost no teachers last year.

Cowley was nominated by Agriculture Teacher Alicia Moore.

“Talking about Healthy Schools seems like something that should be a ‘no brainer’ yet many schools are just not that safe.  Our ideas for a healthy school come straight from the top of our District.  

Our Superintendent, Harold Cowley, leads by example.  Since I came to the district 3 years ago, we lost one of our maintenance men and I became asbestos coordinator and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) coordinator.

Even though I had a broken foot, Mr. Cowley immediately arranged for me to go the appropriate training to make sure our campus stayed safe for our students.  We are a safer district due to the many steps he has taken.  

He makes sure staff in all key positions are trained. He oversees many of the checklists for building maintenance and code compliance. He personally checks on everything from the condition of the school bus tires to the fire extinguishers. Superintendent Cowley brings in people to check our campus on a regular basis.  Our school participates in a national tractor safety program.  Faculty receive monthly IPM newsletters. Yantis gets perfect scores in the health department’s pest management inspection report.

For these reasons and many more, I nominate Harold Cowley, Yantis ISD Superintendent as our 2012 Healthy Schools Hero.  Without a doubt, his sense of responsibility, inspirational leadership, and exemplary persistence and courage protects children from school hazards and unhealthy school conditions in Yantis, Texas.”  

What is special about Yantis?

According to Superintendent Cowley, Yantis ISD is an "outstanding community" because of the high quality of school personnel and the sense of pride people have in their community and their school system. 

Yantis is a small diverse community of 375 students. Although 62% of the students are economically disadvantaged, Yantis is a property-wealthy school district that sends local tax revenues back to the state to share with other districts. 

Yantis is a community where people care for each other, supporting each other when there is a death in a family even if they don’t know the person.  There is a coat fund and a fund that helps buy glasses for students. Someone donated money so every student could buy shoes. Last year every kid got a free breakfast and lunch not only to teach good nutrition but Cowley believes that “you can’t learn if your stomach hurts” and “if kids feel good they feel good about themselves.”  People who can’t afford a ticket to home games get a “golden pass.”

Cowley champions school quality, safety and security.

Cowley believes that “An once of prevention is worth a pound of cure” and “If something is worth doing, it is worth doing right.”  He knows, “if a community is proud of the school, you take care of your school.

His safety concerns included updating the alarm system and making sure all buildings meet the fire code.  He put the gas lines and meters outside.  Although the state requires a pressure check only every two years, he gets a certified plumber to come in to check the pressure regularly.  

"I wouldn't want my kid on an unsafe bus."

Cowley checks the bus tires frequently and inspects the school buses once a month. The district is always ready for the Department of Transportation’s rigid inspection. Twice a year buses get deep cleaned. They pop the cushions, wiping and disinfecting the buses from top to bottom.

Restrooms and classrooms are cleaned every night, especially, doors and desks, by a staggered day and night crew of four men.  Every filter in the HVAC system is changed every three months. The schools conduct monthly fire drills that include staging an "obstructed way" so students learn to take alternative way out.  They also do tornado disaster drills and locked down drills.  Cowley’s focus on continuous improvement includes seeking cost savings through updates in energy efficiency.

Cowley remembers how students in the 1950s were taught highly technical skills in seven separate vocations. They developed confidence and pride attending shows and contests.  
Today, he is proud that Yantis ISD has more technology than any school district in Texas, regardless of size.  Every room is equipped with smart boards and ceiling projectors. Students have access to a wide array of learning programs and virtual field trips. Juniors and Seniors can take college classes.  The district has three robotics teams.

Quality Science: Teaching Safely and Teaching Safety

Cowley is especially proud of the safe science classrooms. The chemistry classes in the junior and senior high have separate prep rooms and secure chemical storage rooms.  
I have had the privilege of working with Mr. Cowley for 7 years,” writes Michael Alphin, Yantis High School Principal and Science Teacher.  “Mr. Cowley has always supported the science department and teachers.  

He supports purchasing any safety equipment that we need to maintain a safe and effective laboratory.  When the new middle school was being designed, he collaborated with the science teachers to build a laboratory and classroom equipped with all the proper safety equipment such as eyewash and shower stations and emergency shutoff switches to the laboratory. All chemicals are kept in the chemical store room.  Flammables are in flammable cabinets and acids in the acid cabinets. The new middle school laboratory was built with a very spacious prep room and then an attached chemical closet.  Teaching proper safety techniques ensures that our science students in Yantis ISD have the best learning experience possible in the safest environment.”

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January 27, 2012

Clean, Green and Healthy Schools Webinar Series

Hosted by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region 8, the webinars are designed for schools serving tribal communities but are OPEN TO ALL: school administrators, risk managers, educators, health and safety coordinators, school health professionals, environmental protection personnel, parents, communities, and EPA personnel.

Please register to attend. You may attend one or more presentations in the webinar series and there is no cost to attend.
   
Register at: www.epa.gov/region8/tribalschools
For additional information:  Matthew M. Langenfeld, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Region 8, 1595 Wynkoop Street, 8P-P3T, Denver, CO 80202, 303-312-6284, Langenfeld.matthew@epa.gov
  
Integrated Pest Management & Green Cleaning in Schools
Mike Daniels, Native Integrated Pest Management Consultant
North Central Integrated Pesticide Management
Marie Zanowick, EPA
2/1/2012 3:30 PM MST, 5:30 PM EST

Recycling, Composting & Gardening in Schools
Virginia Till, EPA
Diane Jourdan, Oneida and Stockbridge Tribe
2/8/2012 3:30 PM MST, 5:30 PM EST

Indoor Air in Schools
Mansel Nelson; Graylynn Jaysue Hudson, Northern Arizona
Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals
2/15/2012 3:30 PM, 5:30 PM EST

Energy & Water Conservation in Schools
Deenise Becenti, Navajo Tribal Utility Authority
2/22/2012 3:30 PM MST, 5:30 PM EST

September 25, 2011

New standards set for industrial pipe cleaning in wake of deadly 2010 Conn ...


Update 9 24 2011  New standards set for industrial pipe cleaning in wake of deadly 2010 Conn ...  The Republic  AP MIDDLETOWN, Conn. — Federal officials are coming to Connecticut to unveil a new safety standard on how industrial gas-piping systems should be cleaned, a measure developed after the deadly 2010 Kleen Energy plant explosion. ...
 _______ 

August 5, 2010 $16.6 Million in Fines After Fatal Blast at a Connecticut Plant by RUSS BUETTNER

February 08, 2011

EPA Grant to protect children in homes, schools, child care

EPA's Office of Children's Health Protection is pleased to announce the release of a solicitation for grant proposals to address children's environmental health in underserved communities by building capacity for these communities to reduce environmental exposures in child-occupied settings, eg, homes, schools and child care centers.  Funds available for award are expected to total approximately $1.5 million, and EPA intends to award approximately 15-20 awards, each for an amount not to exceed $100,000.  The due date for initial proposals is February 18, 2011.  Assistance under this competition is available to States or state agencies, territories, city or township governments, county governments, the District of Columbia, federally recognized American Indian Tribes, possessions of the U.S, public and private universities and colleges, hospitals, laboratories, other public or private nonprofit institutions, and 501(c)(3) organizations.  For complete information regarding this Request for Initial Proposals, see: http://yosemite.epa.gov/ochp/ochpweb.nsf/content/grants.htm

August 06, 2010

Ceres is serious about safety

Investors Ask Oil, Insurance Groups to Disclose Safety Plans  August 5, 2010 By NATHANIAL GRONEWOLD of Greenwire

NEW YORK -- A coalition of mostly institutional investors is demanding oil and gas companies disclose their existing safeguards and plans of action in the event of another offshore rig disaster and possible oil spill like the one experienced by BP PLC and other companies in the Gulf of Mexico.

Led by Ceres, a Boston-based nonprofit committed to promoting investor activism in environmental and social issues, more than 50 U.S. and global investors sent letters to major offshore oil and gas producers. The letters request, among other things, that companies disclose their investments in spill prevention technologies, their contingency plans in the event of a deepwater well blowout and their risk exposure to possible new regulations on deepwater drilling activities.

Insurance companies that back policies for the oil and gas industry also received letters from the group. Those letters ask insurers to disclose whether they are considering adjusting their relative exposure to the industry or are changing underwriting rules in the wake of the disaster.

Read more.

Accidents Haunt Experimental Science


April 11, 2010

No Place to Hang Out

Flyer.JPG
Hattiesburg, Mississippi, April 13, 2010 – The video begins with the earnest voice of a teenager, reading her own words: “My name is Shawn-Ashlee Davis. I’m a senior at Forrest County Agricultural High School in Mississippi. And on October 31, 2009, two people who were very close to me, and the ones I loved, died in an instant. Was it a car crash? No. It was an oil tank explosion.” 
             Told through the eyes and voices of grieving and concerned parents, friends, and local officials, the newest CSB safety video, “No Place to Hang Out: The Danger of Oil Sites,” tells the story of the tragic deaths of 18-year-old Wade White and 16-year-old Devon Byrd, killed October 31, 2009, when an oil tank, located in a clearing in the woods near the home of one of the boys in the rural town of Carnes, suddenly exploded. 

April 24, 2010 
Former Gainesville resident injured in tank explosion
In a statement to KYTX, an East Texas television affiliate, ... The April 24 explosion also has many in New London talking about another tragic ... On March 18, 1937, a natural gas leak set off an explosion at a New London School taking ...
education.tmcnet.com/news/2010/05/10/4779615.htm

April 03, 2010

What is Responsible Chemical Management?

Responsible chemical management involves taking steps to ensure chemicals in schools do not endanger students and school personnel.
– Evaluating chemicals for need, quantity, and appropriateness;
– Properly labeling,storing,and securing chemicals; and
– Safely disposing of waste and/or excess chemicals.
from Healthy Schools School Chemical Cleanout Webinar -
Matthew Langenfeld USEPA Region 8 303-312-6284
http://peakstoprairies.org/library/webinars/2010_healthy-safe-schools/SchoolChemicalCleanoutWebinarJan12.pdf

March 12, 2010

Set aside a special day each year as a memorial....


...let us suggest the legislature of Texas set aside a special day each year to be observed as a memorial day on which tribute will be paid to the children and teachers who died in this catastrophe...and to make laws of safety... Our daddies and mothers, as well as the teachers, want to know that when we leave our homes in the morning to go to school, that we will come out safe when our lessons are over.
At the 2005 reunion of the New London School Explosion families, Carolyn Jones Frei reads the March 25, 1937 speech she gave as fifth grader Carolyn Jones to the Texas Legislature. She is standing in a corner of the London Museum being recorded by filmmaker Reva Goldberg. At her side is the machine that adds mercaptan, the warning smell to natural gas.
Complete Transcript

Mr. President, members of the house of representatives, and friends of school children, I’m here today as a representative of the London school and as a survivor of the school explosion that took the lives of nearly 500 pupils, teachers, and parents.

Last Thursday afternoon while my colleague and I were studying spelling for the interscholastic meet in which we were going to represent our school the next day, our teacher Mrs. Sory saw some pictures fall from the wall and several vases crash from the desk.

In an instant she had jerked open two nearby windows and said get out of here. We were clinging to her when we heard the first awful rumble that in a few seconds caused the room to collapse.

Mrs. Sory helped us out of the window and in another few seconds we were separated by the dark cloud of dust that blinded us.

When it got so I could see again I ran home as fast as I could. My teacher and friend were not killed, but I did not see them again.

My sister Helen Jones, an honor student and member of the high school champion debate team, was not so fortunate. She and my uncle, Paul Grier, a senior who planned to study medicine, were both taken from us in this awful explosion that killed so many of the future generation of East Texas.

When the announcement was made a few hours earlier by our principle that school would be dismissed for the county meet, the usual joy and excitement of a holiday prevailed. Little did we realize that we soon would be searching in the ruins of our beautiful school building for the bodies of our sisters and brothers and teachers.

First, as a representative of these school friends and teachers of mine, both living and dead, I am here today to express our appreciation for all that you and our governor have done for the relief of the suffering people of this community.

Second, let us suggest the legislature of Texas set aside a special day each year to be observed as a memorial day on which tribute will be paid to the children and teachers who died in this catastrophe.

We want to thank you for the memorial fund to which many of you have already contributed and which people all over the world are sending donations. We believe if those students and teachers who died would speak they would want a living memorial instead of a stately building.

By all means, we should have an appropriate but simple structure on which will appear the names of each pupil, teacher, and parent who died. With the remaining portion of money, our teachers suggest an endowment fund, to be used for the future education for the surviving children so that each might be assured of a college education if they so desired.

In conclusion, let me urge you, our lawmaking body, to make laws of safety, so it will not be possible for another explosion of this type to occur in the history of Texas schools.

Our daddies and mothers, as well as the teachers, want to know that when we leave our homes in the morning to go to school, that we will come out safe when our lessons are over.

Out of this explosion, we have learned of a new hazard that hovers about some of our school buildings. If this hazard can be forever blotted out of existence then we will not have completely lost our loved ones in vain.

We need say nothing more on the point of safety legislation because we as children of London school know that our faith in our government will not be betrayed. We will have safe school buildings in the future.

All of us who were spared will try to show our appreciation by striving to become the finest of citizens to carry on the work of this wonderful land of yours and mine.

This is our plea, thank you.

... As a result of the New London tragedy, the 45th Legislature enacted House Bill 1017 which amended Article 6053, Texas Revised Civil Statutes, 1925, giving the Railroad Commission the authority to adopt rules and regulations pertaining to the odorization of natural gas or liquefied petroleum gases. On July 27, 1937, Gas Utilities Docket 122 was adopted and the Commission began enforcement of odorization requirements for natural gas. 

March 07, 2010



Vignette # 1 –Toxic Inhalation Hazard & Corrosive Chlorine Gas – Risk Factor 4
 
The lecture bottle (small gas cylinder) in the left photo was found in a high school corrosive storage cabinet.  The cylinder was unlabeled and none of the current teachers knew what it contained.  The corrosive vapors from a leaking bottle of sulfuric acid had seriously damaged the valve.  The teacher said she had considered cracking the valve and bleeding out a little gas to see if she could determine what it was by the smell but had thought better of it.  Fortunately, a former chemistry teacher was substitute teaching that day in a nearby room. When asked about the cylinder, he said, “Oh yeah, I know what that is.  It’s just chlorine.”

The lecture bottles on the right were from another school.  The red cylinder has the word “Chlorine” hand written on it in grease pencil.  None of the teachers knew these cylinders were stored in a box in a hidden shelf in the chemistry storage room.  In both cases, no one had the faintest idea of how to dispose of them, nor were they aware of the need to get them off their property as soon as possible.

In both cases, once I explained that there was sufficient pure chlorine gas in a full lecture bottle to be immediately life threatening to 100,000 people if distributed evenly, the schools were immediately in agreement that those gas cylinders needed to be removed and properly disposed as fast as possible.

What lessons can we pull from these two stories of unneeded toxic gases?
  • With no specific information on the hazards posed by chemicals, there is little motivation to dispose of them as long as they aren’t interfering in the daily routine.
  • When people gain perspective on the risks their chemicals pose to themselves and the students at their school, they are more willing to dispose of unneeded hazardous compounds.
  • When the photograph of the chlorine cylinder on the left was shown to the manager of our hazardous waste inspection program, our agency immediately determined these old school chemicals were a priority issue for us to tackle.  This led to a shift in funding to allow our program to help offset school cleanouts and the assignment of some of our field inspectors to tackle this problem.
Vignette #2: Toxic & Oxidizing Lead Nitrate – Risk Factor 3

A middle school in Washington State had over 500 containers of lab chemicals, including 13 pounds of lead nitrate, in their science stockroom.  Lead nitrate is a poisonous oxidizer that is often used in dilute solutions and reacted with other chemicals to create colorful precipitates.

I asked the teacher if he used the lead nitrate.  

“Oh yeah, don’t get rid of that stuff, I need it.” 

“How much do you use?,” I asked.  

“Well, let’s see, I use one gram each quarter in the double displacement lab, and another gram a year in the flame test.”  

“OK,” I said, “then that’s about five grams a year, right?”  

“Yeah, that sounds right.”  

“Well then, with 454 grams in a pound, that means it’ll take you 90 years to use up one pound.  And with 13 pounds in stock, you’ve got about a 1,200 year supply on hand.  How long are you planning on teaching?”  

He laughed and agreed that he could probably get rid of some.  By the end of the discussion, he kept the newest container and set aside the other 12 pounds for disposal as hazardous waste.  

And, most importantly, he was then willing to dispose of another 150 pounds of hazardous chemicals that were on his shelves without feeling threatened that I was there to get rid of his needed chemicals.

What lessons can we pull from this typical story of too many bottles in storage?
  • They may need the chemical, but it doesn’t mean they need all they have.
  • A skilled inspector, asking probing questions in a non threatening way, can help a science teacher look at their chemicals in a new way.
  • When people gain perspective on the risks their chemicals pose to themselves and the students at their school, they are more willing to dispose of unneeded hazardous compounds.
  • The lab experiments that use this chemical are typically only taught in high-school-level chemistry classes.
Vignette #3: Corrosive Hydrofluoric Acid – Risk Factor 4

While dissolving minerals in a geology process laboratory, a technician spilled less than half a pint of  hydrofluoric acid (HF) onto his lap, splashing both thighs. The only protective equipment worn were chemical-resistant gloves.
He received chemical burns to nine percent of his body despite washing his legs with water from a hose at 1.5 gallons per minute. His contaminated clothing was not removed during the flushing process. Following flushing, the technician immersed himself in a chlorinated swimming pool for 40 minutes before an ambulance arrived. He became unconscious soon after arriving at a nearby hospital and his condition continued to deteriorate despite their best efforts.  His right leg was amputated seven days after the exposure and he died eight days later.

Investigators said he should have been wearing full length PVC coveralls with sleeves to the wrist, a face shield, rubber boots, safety goggles and mid-arm length PVC gloves while working with HF in a fume hood.  Calcium gluconate gel should have been nearby for immediate application on any exposed skin surface before the acid could penetrate the skin.

From this report  you can see why hydrofluoric acid (HF) is considered dangerous; it’s very toxic and readily passes into the bloodstream through exposed skin, a potent combination of risk factors. The fluorine ion in HF preferentially binds with calcium. Spilled HF acts as an anesthetic as it passes through the skin into the bloodstream where it quickly begins to dissolve bones and cause systemic poisoning. This is why HF is considered the highest risk acid in schools. Other acids may be corrosive but they do not contain this additional secondary effect that increases their risk.

As you may have guessed, no secondary school in the United States has safety gear or spill supplies available that resemble the recommended personal protective equipment described in the anecdote.

Both art classes and science classes can include classroom activities that use HF.  Though most science teachers are willing to eliminate their collection of old HF containers, that’s often  not the case with art teachers.  Why would an art teacher argue to keep their HF paste?  Because it has been used by artists for years in stained glass and other glass-etching techniques.

HF dissolves glass on contact, releasing harmful fumes, as described by Arthur Duthie in 1908 in Decorative Glass Processes. "The fumes escape from full strength acid so profusely as to be quite visible like a yellow smoke, and are not only obnoxious, but dangerous. Even at moderate working strength they will cause bleeding of the throat and nostrils in persons in whom these organs happen to be weak, while they commonly cause severe smarting of the eyes..."

Vignette # 4: Pyrophoric White and Yellow Phosphorus – Risk Factor 4

White phosphorus is pyrophoric, as is yellow phosphorus, which means they spontaneously ignite in contact with air.  Pure phosphorus is highly toxic and should be stored under water.

The Canning Jar on the left has a large amount of white phosphorus which, over time, has reacted make the water acidic and corroded the container’s lid.  This has allowed water evaporate over time and lower the water level to a quarter-inch above the top of the phosphorus sticks.  If the water layer lowered even slightly, the risk of spontaneous combustion are very high.

The teacher said he needed to keep it, because he used it in a lab.  Turned out that all he did was cut off  a piece, take it outside and drop it on the pavement where it released poisonous smoke and burned a hole in the asphalt.  Unlike him, I was unconvinced that this was “good science.”

Why would a middle school science teacher have this much white phosphorus, and why would he try to convince me that he needed to keep it?  

Upon reflection, I think there were three reasons:

  • Teenagers have poor attention spans, so having something spontaneously ignite looks “cool” and may get them to pay attention to what’s going on, if only for a minute or two.
  • The teacher didn’t notice that the water level had dropped and didn’t think about the consequences of the container’s contents spontaneously igniting on top of the wooden shelf in his stockroom filled with chemicals.
  • The teacher had been around for a long time and had become fond of his more esoteric chemicals and didn’t want to see them go.  Like me, he liked the chance to tell some “chemical war stories” and phosphorus is much more lively a focus than baking soda.
Vignette #5: Water Reactive & Peroxidizable Elemental Potassium – Risk Factor 4
   

Potassium metal is highly water-reactive.  Though not commonly found in schools, science teachers use it to demonstrate the properties of the alkali metals.  First a piece of lithium is dropped in water and fizzes.  Then a piece of sodium metal is dropped on the water, where it turns into a molten ball that dances across the surface, fizzing loudly.  When potassium is dropped added, it zings around the surface of the water with purple flames shooting into the air above it.

Potassium is sold as silver-gray sticks of soft metal under kerosene or mineral oil to keep moisture away.  It reacts with the air; first to form white potassium hydroxide crystals.  After time has passed, the reaction continues and forms potentially explosive peroxide crystals.  Peroxidized potassium, seen above in the photo on the right, is characterized by orange, red or purple crystals.

Peroxidized potassium was found in the same middle school stockroom as the white phosphorus shown earlier.  The teacher was unconvinced when I said the container must be disposed, saying “I can use it, I’ll just scrape off the orange stuff.”  I pointed out that the act of scraping could start a chain reaction that would cause the entire chunk to detonate.  He still persisted in saying he needed it.  Finally I said “Look, if you do that, it could blow your hands off.”  As if snapping out of a hypnotic state, he looked up and went “Oh!, Well then. Maybe I can just use the newer jar over here instead.”  After three days of treatment and $6,000 in fees, the stabilized material was disposed as hazardous waste.