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CUMC Environmental Health and Safety
Date:
May
1, 2006
For most of us, recycling is a matter of sorting plastics and paper,
then making them available for pickup. As you’d expect, it’s not quite
as simple at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC) with its 700
labs and 1,000 lab rooms.
Since early 2002, the Environmental Health & Safety Department at
CUMC has been working hard to find ways to reduce waste and recycle,
says Kathleen Collins, Director of Laboratory Safety.
More than 70 percent of the space used by CUMC is regulated. And $2
million has been invested recently to make sure that it all meets U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency standards. As a result of a voluntary,
three-phase self-audit offered by the EPA to Northeast biomedical
institutions, four million square feet of CUMC space are in top
environmental condition.
Two of the recycling targets focused on lab solvents xylene and
alcohol, which used to account for nearly 25 percent of the waste
generated each year. The surgical pathology and dermatopathology labs
are the two largest consumers of these solvents for their
tissue-processing and staining procedures.
So the two laboratories under the guidance of Environmental Health & Safety were the first to pilot recycling technologies for xylene and
alcohol. This with the installation of chemical recycling machines in
the two labs. The recycling equipment purifies the used solvents by
filtering out contaminants.
Recycling these chemicals will significantly reduce both purchase and
disposal costs, says Dr. Robert Lewy, senior associate dean for faculty
affairs and regulatory compliance for Health Sciences. In addition to
the cost savings, these efforts are promoting a greener environment by
preventing pollution.
Silver recovery from x-ray film developing also has begun. Recovery
systems were installed to prevent silver from literally going down the
drain in more than 30 labs that process film. This allows proper
disposal of the scrap film, rather than mixing it with other waste that
goes to a landfill. Collins describes another program in which all
departments were asked whether their mercury thermometers could be
replaced with alcohol ones. Most said fine, Collins says. And where the
change was infeasible, the departments received mercury spill kits.
Lead from computer monitors, mercury from fluorescent lights, and
batteries also are recycled. "Older computer monitors each have about 5
pounds of lead so we estimate we saved over 5,000 pounds of lead from
going into landfills," Lewy says.
Ensuring that these standards are maintained daily falls to lab workers
and a dedicated team of 200 maintenance staff, including members of the
Transportation Workers Union. They undergo training twice a year by
Environmental Health & Safety. According to Crowley, and the EPA,
which approved the self-audit with flying colors last year, Columbia’s
Medical Center is in good hands.
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