They refused them when I brought them to the dump. The garbage people don't take them. What the hell am I supposed to do with them. There is no information on that I can find on google about household hazardous waste disposal in Buffalo, NY. I hope by writing this, someone will come forward with an answer and then everyone else who searches for the info will find it here.
This is the container they are in. It is warping from the chemical vapors. Our garage leaks so it is not in ideal conditions. I refuse to bring it in the house.

The containers are now all swimming in some sort of sludge.

How come there is no information about this on the web. Does everyone just throw this shit in the garbage? Is that what I am supposed to do. It seems too dangerous, but I need somewhere to properly dispose of it.

More from that website:
Funding availability for Municipal HHW collection programs
For municipally-run HHW collection programs to effectively reduce HHW, they must be readily accessible to residents, and must be accompanied by both promotion of the collection program and education about source reduction. To help achieve these goals, New York State's Environmental Protection Fund provides financial assistance to local governments.
Note: READILY ACCESSIBLE. North Campus does NOT qualify as readily accessible!!
"State funding is available from the Environmental Protection Fund for up to 50 percent of the costs of municipal HHW collection programs. For more information about State funding, please review the HHW State Assistance Program website or contact DEC at 518-402-8705 or email dshmwrr@gw.dec.state.ny.us"
From this page: :::link:::
The question is, has our local govt applied for this funding? Are they aware of this funding? If they have applied for the funding, how are they using this money? Shouldn't they set up a service where residents can contact them for waste pick-up on designated days? Would writing to the above email help? Maybe we could all write indivisual letters to that email and that would force them to sit up and take notice?
oops. That didn't come out as I expected. I guess I can pretend that I was talking in empty code with the secret Dr.Dre.
@(e:Drew): OH NO, those pain stripper chemicals are messing with your biochemical homeostatic mechanisms!@!
@(E:Dre):
I this case that is a really unacceptable solution. There is no way I am filling my car with explosive chemicals in containers in such poor condition and then driving them all the fuck the way out to ECC north campus.
I doubt anyone else does this either, which makes me think everyone just throws the stuff out. The city really needs a better, in-city solution. Or at least somewhere to drop these kind of chemicals off. I mean most everyone has household chemicals and just about no one knows where to get rid of them.
♦
♦♦ Household hazardous waste drop off day
♦ Items which can be brought to the site for free, proper
disposal include:
PESTICIDES, FERTILIZERS, POOL AND HOUSEHOLD
CHEMICALS/CLEANERS -limit 2 gallons or 20#
♦
♦♦
♦
OIL-BASED PAINTS, SPRAY CANS -limit 10 gallons
♦
♦♦
♦
PAINT THINNER, STRIPPER & SOLVENTS -limit 2 gallons
♦
♦♦
♦
BATTERIES - lead acid & rechargeable
♦
♦♦
♦
OIL, GASOLINE, KEROSENE, ANTIFREEZE-limit 10 gallons
♦
♦♦
♦
MERCURY - thermometers, thermostats, metal
♦
♦♦
♦
PROPANE TANKS & CYLINDERS - full or empty
ERIE COUNTY
Saturday, MAY 10, 2008
9:00 A.M. - 2:00 P.M.
Chris Collins County Executive
Holly Sinnott, AICP, Commissioner
Erie County Department of Environment & Planning
ERIE COMMUNITY COLLEGE
North Campusâ€"WILLIAMSVILLE, NY
(enter from Wehrle Drive)
Sponsored by:
Satish B. Mohan
Amherst Town Supervisor
Support from the following is gratefully acknowledged:
Erie Community College; United States Coast Guard;
Waste Management, Inc.; NOCO Energy Corp.;
The Battery Post, Inc.; NYS Department of Environmental
Conservation; Erie County Environmental Education
Institute, Inc.
NO TIRES, LATEX PAINT, COMPUTERS, APPLIANCES, COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL WASTES
Note: Participants may need to verify that wastes are generated by households.
For more information:
call 858-6800
or visit www.erie.gov/environment
Either I am having blackouts, or (e:Janelle) is commenting as me.
If you get an answer, let us know. We have some paint stripper stuff that's making Janelle nervous.