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Promoting Voluntary Efforts to Reduce Dental Mercury Releases to Wastewater Mark McMillan Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment October 29, 2004. Objectives. Why this project, this place? Project phases Applying project results statewide. Why this project, this place?.
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Promoting Voluntary Effortsto Reduce Dental Mercury Releasesto WastewaterMark McMillanColorado Department of Public Health and EnvironmentOctober 29, 2004
Objectives • Why this project, this place? • Project phases • Applying project results statewide
Why this project, this place? • March 2002 - Enforcement action against CF&I Steel (dba Rocky Mountain Steel Mills) • $1,800,000 penalty largely applied to Pueblo-based Supplemental Environmental Projects (SEPs): • $500,000: Community-Based Projects • $500,000: Alternative Energy Projects • $500,000: Mercury Removal Projects • ($300,000: Civil Penalty)
Why this project, this place? Mercury Removal Projects: • $400,000 – Mercury Switch Removal Project http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/hm/mercury/mercuryhom.asp • $100,000 – Other Pueblo-Based Mercury Pollution Prevention Projects
Why this project, this place? • Interest and support from CDPHE Water Quality Control Division • Hg in surface water can bioaccumulate in fish tissue, posing risk to wildlife and humans that eat contaminated fish • 41 states, including Colorado, have issued fish-advisories due to Hg contamination • POTWs may face increasing challenges meeting new, lowered discharge limits for Hg (due to new EPA standard test method)
Why this project, this place? • Dentists are a known source of Hg discharges to wastewater in Colorado • An Evaluation of the Source Impacts and Control of Mercury. Al Garcia, Littleton-Englewood Wastewater Treatment Plant, 2002. • Dental Hg releases to wastewater can be minimized through best management practices • Pueblo-based pilot project results may be transferable throughout the stateProject funding: $50,000
Project Phases • Phase 1: Dental Survey/Data Collection • Phase 2: Focused Outreach Effort • Phase 3: Measurement of Project Value and Success
Phase 1: Dental Survey/ Data Collection • Survey Purpose: To assess the use of BMP and BAT among Pueblo dentists, and to identify areas for outreach and improvement • Survey results are summarized in:Dental Mercury Pollution PreventionPhase I Summary Report, Tetra Tech EMI Inc., February 2004.
Phase 1: Dental Survey/ Data Collection • December 2003: Survey mailed to 59 dentists at 51 practices in Pueblo that either use or remove mercury-containing amalgam • Survey Response Rate: • 41 out of 59 dentists responded (69%) • 40 out of 51 practices responded (78%)
Mercury Amalgam Separators(The Hg5 Mercury Amalgam Separator System by SolmeteX Inc) • Typically designed for in-line installation between the chair-side water drain and vacuum pump. • Removes particles through physical and chemical processes, including: sedimentation, centrifugation, filtration, and ion exchange. • Must be at least 96% efficient to be ISO certified. • Required by law in Maine. Under consideration in seven other states. • Typical cost: $500 - $7,500(Ref. Journal of ADA)
Phase 1: Dental Survey/ Data Collection • American Dental Association: “Best Management Practices for Amalgam Waste,” February 2003: • “Amalgam should not be disposed of in the garbage, infectious waste ‘red bag,’ or sharps container…. because some communities incinerate municipal garbage, medical waste, and sludge from wastewater treatment plants.” • ADA strongly recommends recycling as a primary best management practice
Phase 2: Focused Outreach • Dental Hg Fact Sheet • Panel Seminar • Increased Involvement by the Colorado Dental Association (CDA)
Phase 2: Dental Hg Fact Sheet • Regulatory Outlook for Pueblo Dentists • Mercury Amalgam Separators • Vendors, Operation/Maintenance, Cost • Mercury Recycling • Recyclers, Materials, Methods, Cost • BMP Scorecard
Phase 2: Panel Seminar • May 18, 2004 at Pueblo City-County Library • Agenda: • Welcome and Introduction by CDA • Regulatory Outlook for Pueblo Dentists • Mercury Amalgam Separators • Vendors, types of separators, installation considerations, operation/maintenance • Mercury Recycling • Vendors, types of recyclables, how to implement a recycling program • Breakout Session
Phase 3: Measurement of Project Value and Success • Follow-up Survey to Pueblo Dentists – May 2004 • Final Summary Report - August 2004 • Summary of Project Results: BMPs/BATs implemented, Hg releases prevented, life cycle of Hg captured • Lessons Learned: Barriers to amalgam separator implementation • Recommendations for project improvement • Recommendations for statewide implementation • Project Follow-up – 2005
Overall Conclusions From Dental P2 Effort • Surveys Useful for Gauging Interest, Gathering Information • Dentists Thought Fact Sheet, BMP Insert, Meetings Worthwhile • Voluntary Programs May Limit Need for Regulations • Voluntary Programs Allow Participants to Customize Their Role • Efforts Transferable
Applying Project Results Statewide • Pueblo pilot project is a first-step in providing compliance assistance to Colorado POTWs charged with meeting new, lowered discharge permit limits for Hg. • Outreach materials, including dental fact-sheet, vendor information, and panel seminar materials, will be made transferable through out the state. • Outreach materials and ongoing summary reports available at: http://www.cdphe.state.co.us/hm/mercury/dental.asp
Comments/Questions/Ideas? • Contact: • Mark McMillanCDPHE Mercury Programmark.mcmillan@state.co.us, 303-692-3140 • Rick KoplitzWater Quality Control Division, CDPHErick.koplitz@state.co.us ,303-692-3618 • Paul Cozetta Water Quality Control, City of Pueblo pcozzetta@pueblo.us, 729-544-3453