In addition to the definitions adopted by reference from WAC
173-350-100, the following specific definitions shall apply:
The following definition of "biomedical waste" is adopted from Chapter
70.95K RCW. Any subsequent amendment to the definition of "biomedical waste" in Chapter
70.95K RCW shall be considered to have been incorporated into this chapter without the need for further amendment.
"Biomedical waste"means, and is limited to, the following types of wastes:
1. "Animal waste"is waste animal carcasses, body parts, and bedding of animals known to be infected with, or that have been inoculated with, human pathogenic microorganisms infectious to humans.
2. "Biosafety Level 4 disease waste"is waste contaminated with blood, excretions, exudates, or secretions from humans or animals who are isolated to protect others from highly communicable infectious diseases that are identified as pathogenic organisms assigned to Biosafety Level 4 by the Centers for Disease Control, National Institutes of Health, Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories, current edition.
3. "Cultures and stocks"are wastes infectious to humans and includes specimen cultures, cultures and stocks of etiologic agents, wastes from production of biologicals and serums, discarded live and attenuated vaccines, and laboratory waste that has come into contact with cultures and stocks of etiologic agents or blood specimens. Such waste includes but is not limited to culture dishes, blood specimen tubes, and devices used to transfer, inoculate, and mix cultures.
5. "Pathological waste"is waste human source biopsy materials, tissues, anatomical parts, that emanate from surgery, obstetrical procedures, and autopsy. Pathological waste does not include teeth, human corpses, remains, and anatomical parts that are intended for interment or cremation.
7. "Sharps waste"is all hypodermic needles, syringes with needles attached, intravenous tubing with needles attached, scalpel blades, and lancets that have been removed from the original sterile package.
"Biomedical waste generator"means any producer of biomedical waste to include without limitation the following categories: general acute care hospitals, skilled nursing facilities or convalescent hospitals, intermediate care facilities, in-patient care facilities for the developmentally disabled, chronic dialysis clinics, community clinics, health maintenance organizations, surgical clinics, urgent care clinics, acute psychiatric hospitals, laboratories, medical buildings, physicians' offices and clinics, veterinary offices and clinics, dental offices and clinics, funeral homes, home health care facilities or other person whose act or process produces biomedical waste as defined in this chapter.
"Biosafety Level 2"means the level of safety applicable for handling broad-spectrum indigenous moderate-risk agents present in the community and associated with human disease of varying severity. Hepatitis B virus, the salmonellae, and Toxoplasma spp. are representative of microorganisms assigned to Biosafety Level 2 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Institutes of Health, Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories, current edition.
"Biosafety Level 3"means the level of safety applicable for handling indigenous or exotic agents with a potential for respiratory transmission, and which may cause serious and potentially lethal infection. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, St. Louis encephalitis virus, and Coxiella burnetii are representative of microorganisms assigned to Biosafety Level 3 by the CDC, National Institutes of Health, Biosafety in Microbiological and Biomedical Laboratories, current edition.
"Bulk container"means packaging, other than a vessel or barge, including a transport vehicle or freight container, in which untreated biomedical wastes are loaded with no intermediate form of containment and which has:
1. A maximum capacity greater than 450 liters (119 gallons) as a receptacle for liquid; or
2. A maximum net mass greater than 400 kilograms (882 pounds) and a maximum capacity greater than 450 liters (119 gallons) as a receptacle for a solid.
"Chemical disinfection"means a biomedical waste treatment and decontamination method which utilizes appropriately formulated chemical solutions to disinfect biomedical waste and contaminated areas.
"Container"means any portable device in which materials are transported, treated, disposed of or otherwise handled.
"Contaminated"means all regulated medical waste which has come in contact with material capable of producing infection.
"Control point"means an operation at which preventive and/or control actions are taken because of best management practices, regulations, or company policy.
"Critical control point"means an operation at which a preventive or control measure can be exercised that will eliminate, prevent or minimize a hazard.
"Critical limit"means one or more prescribed tolerances that must be met to ensure that a critical control point effectively controls the specified hazard. Critical limits on critical control points represent the boundaries for safety.
"Director"means the administrative director of Whatcom County health department, or a representative authorized by the administrative director.
"Disinfect"means killing of infectious agents outside the body by directly applied chemical or physical means.
"Facility"means all contiguous land (including buffers and setbacks) and structures, other appurtenances, and improvements on the land used for solid waste handling.
"Gas/vapor sterilization"means a biomedical waste treatment method, only for use under very controlled circumstances, that uses gases or vaporized chemicals as sterilizing agents.
"Generators"means medical or research facilities including hospitals, laboratories, and clinics, which produce infectious waste.
"Handling"means the direct physical management of biomedical waste.
"Hazard analysis"means identification of hazards and assessment of their severity and the risks associated with the hazards.
"Incineration"means a processing method using an engineered apparatus capable of withstanding heat and having as its purpose the efficient thermal oxidation and/or conversion of combustible material into noncombustible residues (ash) and product gases, or reducing the volume of solid wastes by use of an enclosed device using controlled flame combustion.
"Infectious waste"means a subset of biomedical waste which poses a risk of infection, including, but not limited to:
1. Contaminated Laboratory Wastes.a. Human or animal specimen cultures from medical and pathology laboratories.
b. Cultures and stocks of infectious agents from clinical, research, and industrial laboratories (CDC biohazard levels I, II and III).
c. Wastes from production of bacteria, viruses, spores, discarded vaccines, and biologicals from health care or research, and contaminated dishes, or contaminated devices used to transfer, inoculate, and mix cultures.
2. Human surgical specimens, tissues, organs, placentas, and limbs (pathology waste only, exclusive of preservative agents).
3. Fluid blood, fluid blood products, or body fluids, and containers, equipment, or articles contaminated with fluid blood, blood products, or body fluids.
4. Regulated medical waste contaminated with excretions, exudated secretions, or body fluids including, but not limited to, isolation waste, or other regulated medical waste as determined by the infection control staff, physician, veterinarian, or local health officer to be isolated and handled as such.
5. Contaminated sharps waste including, but not limited to:
a. Used or contaminated suture needles, hypodermic needles, syringes, needles with attached tubing, scalpel and razor blades, dental wires, disposable surgical instruments, and electrosurgical needles or blades.
b. Used or contaminated medical or laboratory glassware such as slides, pipettes, blood tubes, vials, bottles, broken or unbroken glass articles which could be broken during handling and transportation thus rendering them contaminated sharps waste.
c. Infectious contaminated international waste from ocean liners, ships, and planes.
6. All waste which has commingled or otherwise been contaminated with infectious waste.
"Infectious waste treatment"means the decontamination of infectious waste by methods approved by state statutes and the local health department.
"Irradiation"means the use of ionizing radiation for the treatment of biomedical waste.
"Local"means within Whatcom County.
"Operator"means a person or corporation who operates all or part of a solid waste handling facility.
"Owner"means a person or corporation who owns all or part of a solid waste handling facility.
"Permit"means an authorization issued by the jurisdictional health department which allows a person to perform solid waste activities at a specific location and which includes specific conditions for such facility operations.
"Person"means an individual, firm, association, copartnership, political subdivision, government agency, municipality, industry, public or private corporation, or any other entity whatever.
"Personnel"means all persons who work at or oversee the operations of a facility involved in biomedical or solid waste handling.
"Regulated medical waste"means medical waste generated by medical or research facilities including, but not limited to, hospitals, laboratories, and clinics, and subject to federal, state or local statutes, which may include infectious waste and noninfectious, regulated medical waste. Also called biomedical, biohazardous or red bag waste.
"Respiratory isolation waste"is waste contaminated with blood or other potentially infectious bodily fluids, exudates or secretions from humans maintained in hospital or domiciliary isolation for disease spread by respiratory or droplet transmission as defined in the CDC Recommendations for Isolation Precautions in Hospitals. Examples of this waste include pulmonary suction canisters, gowns, masks, or other articles contaminated with potentially infectious bodily fluids, exudates or secretions as described above.
"Solid waste"means all putrescible and nonputrescible solid and semisolid wastes, including, but not limited to, biomedical waste, garbage, rubbish, ashes, industrial wastes, swill, sewage sludge, demolition and construction wastes, abandoned vehicles or parts thereof, contaminated soils and contaminated dredged material, and recyclable materials.
"Solid waste handling"means the management, storage, collection, transportation, treatment, utilization, processing or final disposal of solid wastes, including the recovery and recycling of materials from solid wastes, the recovery of energy resources from such wastes or the conversion of the energy in such wastes to more useful forms or combinations thereof.
"Steam disinfection"means a treatment method for biomedical waste utilizing saturated steam within a pressure vessel, e.g., steam sterilization, autoclave or retort, at time lengths and temperatures sufficient to disinfect biomedical wastes.
"Transporter"means a person engaged in the off-site transportation of solid waste by air, rail, highway or water.
"Treatment"means any method, technique or process designed to change the biological character or composition of biomedical waste to render it noninfectious or the physical, chemical, or biological processing of solid waste to make such solid wastes safer for storage or disposal, amenable for recycling or energy recovery, or reduced in volume.
"Vehicle"means any motor vehicle, rail car, watercraft, trailer or motorized or nonmotorized cargo-carrying body used for the movement of solid waste.
"Violation"means an amount of infectious waste accepted at any treatment facility within Whatcom County which exceeds the 0.3 percent limit imposed on a monthly basis.
"Whatcom County's solid waste stream"means the amount of mixed, unseparated solid waste from residential, commercial, institutional, and industrial sources that is generated within Whatcom County, and delivered for disposal to a permitted disposal facility within Whatcom County. This does not include waste delivered for disposal to private industrial landfills, or to construction/demolition landfills.
(Ord. 2000-021; Ord. 2001-011 Exh. A; Ord. 2002-021; Ord. 2004-002; Ord. 2009-025 Exh. A)