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BEST PRACTICES
Even when not required by environmental regulations, the following best practices
are recommended.
- Learn which items in the residential facilities on your campus
contain mercury. Mercury is found in thermometers, thermostats, barometers,
switches, fluorescent bulbs, sprinkler system contacts, and cylindrical batteries
made before 1990. The button batteries found in calculators, watches and hearing
aids may also contain mercury, and so might some topical disinfectants (mercurochrome
or tincture of merthiolate), contact lens solutions and detergents.
- Never put mercury-containing items in the waste, outdoors
or down drains. When products that contain mercury are
thrown away, they end up at landfills, incinerators or wastewater
treatment plants, where the mercury can enter the environment.
- Never touch or vacuum spilled mercury. Keep
people and pets away from the area and open the windows to ventilate
the area. To reduce evaporation, lower the room temperature. Remove
all jewellrey from your hands since mercury bonds with most metals,
and put on rubber gloves. Spilled mercury can spread quickly,
so move furniture away from the spill and prevent the mercury
from flowing into drains, cracks or crevices. Any remaining mercury
will continue to emit dangerous vapours, so it is important to
contain every drop. Vacuuming or sweeping up spilled mercury will
contaminate your vacuum or brush.
- Dispose of mercury waste responsibly. Label
the containers used to collect spilled mercury and keep people
away from them. Never put mercury waste in the waste.
- Try to buy products containing little or no mercury. Choose
alternatives such as digital thermometers or mercury-free thermostats.
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