LOWE'S TO PAY $18.1 MILLION FOR DUMPING HAZARDOUS WASTES IN LANDFILLS

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By Miriam Raftery

April 6, 2014 (San Diego)-- Lowe’s Home Centers have been ordered to  pay 18.1 million dollars to settle claims from San Diego and other California counties for illegally disposing of hazardous waste.

San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie  Dumanis worked with 31 other state District Attorneys and two city attorneys in a civil enforcement action against the home improvement chain. The agencies claim that more than 118 Lowe’s stores throughout the state unlawfully handled and disposed of various hazardous waste and materials over a six-and-a-half-year period.

The materials included pesticides, aerosols, paint and colorants solvents, adhesives, batteries, mercury-containing fluorescent bulbs, electronic waste and other toxic, ignitable and corrosive materials, County News Service reports.

“Safely handling dangerous waste is paramount for all businesses in California,” Dumanis said.

Between 2011 and 2013, the District Attorney’s Environmental Protection Unit joined the County Department of Environmental Health and other investigators to conduct a series of waste inspections of dumpsters belonging to Lowe’s stores in the state, including the eight Lowe’s stores in San Diego.

They found Lowe’s was routinely sending hazardous waste to local landfills not permitted to receive the waste.  Some stores had also accepted items from the public — like batteries and compact fluorescent light bulbs — that were supposed to be recycled, but were instead dumped into the trash.

Hazardous waste produced by California Lowe’s stores through damage, spills and returns is currently being collected by state-registered haulers, taken to proper disposal facilities and properly documented and accounted for.

 


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