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IMEW <br /> Items such as expired or contaminated OTC, aerosol cans that are inoperable whether empty or full, and leaking chemicals all need to be treated as <br /> Hazardous Waste. <br /> Each of these items indicate where it would be sorted or classified among the six waste categories. For example: <br /> • Aerosol can labels that state "flammable" or"contents under pressure" must go in the Flammable tote <br /> • Expired Over the Counter drugs must be placed in the Toxic tote. You can typically find the expiration date by the Drug Facts or Drug Label panel label <br /> • Liquid laundry detergent labels may warn "eye irritant" or"ingesting is hazardous"—these are hazardous materials. Refer to the QRG or UL ItemScan <br /> app to place leaking detergent in the correct bin. <br /> Remember that most items will give an indication of appropriate disposal based on warnings. <br /> Select the highlighted arrow to continue. <br /> Chapter 2: Identifying& Handling Hazardous Audio beings immediately 1. Hazardous Waste Station (HW201_2_3A) <br /> Waste 2. Aerosol can (HW201_2_313) <br /> Static image of Hazardous Waste Station 3. Aerosol can label (HW201_2_3C) <br /> Page Header: Sorting/Classifying Hazardous As the audio presents each of the three 4. OTC drug bottle (HW201_2_3D) <br /> Waste p5. OTC drug label (HW201_2_3E) <br /> examples, show the product,then the label, 6. Liquid laundry detergent (HW201_2_3F) <br /> Page Text: and then move the product to the correct tote. 7. Liquid laundry detergent label <br /> (HW201_2_3G) <br /> Select the highlighted arrow to continue. <br /> 2 3 <br />