Listed, characteristic, and universal waste from healthcare and lab operations. ≈15 minutes from our Baltimore hub — same-week pickup windows for Towson healthcare generators.
Healthcare and laboratory operations routinely generate RCRA hazardous waste — P-listed and U-listed pharmaceuticals, ignitable solvents (xylene, methanol, formalin), corrosives, mercury-containing devices, and characteristic toxics like silver from radiology fixer. Maryland's MDE Hazardous Waste Program enforces 40 CFR Parts 260–273. We profile each waste stream, supply DOT-compliant containers, file LDR and biennial reports, and lab-pack for safe transport.
Notable nearby: GBMC HealthCare, St. Joseph Medical Center (UMMS).
| Agency / Rule | What it requires |
|---|---|
| EPA 40 CFR Parts 260–273 | Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) management standards. |
| Maryland Department of the Environment COMAR 26.13.01–.10 | Maryland Hazardous Waste Management Regulations. |
| EPA 40 CFR 441 | Dental amalgam pretreatment standards (effluent limitations for dental dischargers). |
Maryland-based dispatch. No call centers, no contracts you can't read.
Request a Quote Call 1-240-518-7862Generator status is determined monthly by hazardous waste generated: VSQG (≤100 kg/month), SQG (100–1,000 kg/month), or LQG (>1,000 kg/month). Maryland enforces additional state-specific reporting for SQGs and LQGs. We help profile and track to keep your status accurate.
Formalin solutions ≥10% formaldehyde are typically RCRA hazardous due to corrosivity (D002) and may also exhibit toxicity. Lower concentrations and used formalin should be evaluated against local POTW limits before any sewer discharge.