[Pharmwaste] drop-box disaster?

Chris Smythe Smythe at town.duxbury.ma.us
Tue Jan 3 16:06:01 EST 2012


We have a similar fear in our area.  Although, our department has taken it one step further.  How are the boxes monitored?  Someone could actually drop an explosive in the unmonitored box.  I hadn't thought about this and thought the chances of that happening had to be a million to one.  That was until some local youths decided to drop a bomb attached to a half gallon of gasoline into a mailbox.  It blew the door off the house across the street.  We are in the process of building a new police station and I have proposed a drop box.  How are other departments handling the monitoring of these boxes?  Thanks for the input!

Best regards,

Chris Smythe
DPW Office Manager
Town of Duxbury
781-934-1100 ext 130
781-934-9278 fax


-----Original Message-----
From: pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us [mailto:pharmwaste-bounces at lists.dep.state.fl.us] On Behalf Of Ed Gottlieb
Sent: Tuesday, January 03, 2012 12:33 PM
To: pharmwaste at lists.dep.state.fl.us
Subject: [Pharmwaste] drop-box disaster?

The Coalition for Safe Medication Disposal (Tompkins County, NY) will soon be placing permanent drug drop-boxes in 9 or 10 police stations throughout the County.  

One police chief has not signed up, do to what I think is an irrational fear.  He imagines that various bottles of medications will break when deposited in the box, chemically react, and release clouds of toxic fumes.  I will soon meet with him and have a final chance to allay his fears and get him on board.  

Deposited items will fall into a plastic bin.  I'll provide a heavy weight spill absorbent pad for the bottom of the bin.  I could offer to provide plastic bags for users to place their items in before depositing them and add that request to the text/graphics that will go on the box.  

Can you address the likely hood of any dangerous chemical reaction occurring in a drop box?    
The worst things I can imagine are a spill of mercury and a small explosion if some CLINITEST Reagent Tablets get wet ["Clinitest tablets are highly sensitive to moisture from air or water. Moisture may cause a chemical reaction and the glass bottle could explode."]  

Thanks for any assistance!

Ed Gottlieb
Chair, Coalition for Safe Medication Disposal
Industrial Pretreatment Coordinator
Ithaca Area Wastewater Treatment Facility
525 3rd Street
Ithaca, NY  14850
(607) 273-8381
fax: (607) 273-8433
egottlieb at cityofithaca.org 
   


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